CHELMSFORD, Mass. — A Massachusetts high school student who was arrested by immigration agents on his way to volleyball practice has been released from custody after a judge granted him bond Thursday.
Marcelo Gomes da Silva, 18, who came to the U.S. from Brazil at age 7, was detained by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents Saturday. Authorities have said the agents were looking for the Milford High School teenager's father, who owns the car Gomes da Silva was driving at the time and had parked in a friend's driveway.
Speaking with members of the media outside the detention center shortly after his release on $2,000 bond, Gomes da Silva described ''humiliating'' conditions and said his faith helped him through his six days of detention.
On his wrist, he wore a bracelet made from the thin sheet of metallic blanket he was given to sleep on the cement floor.
''I'll always remember this place,'' he said. ''I'll always remember how it was.''
His lawyer, Robin Nice, told reporters after the hearing in Chelmsford that his arrest ''shouldn't have happened in the first place. This is all a waste.''
''We disrupted a kid's life. We just disrupted a community's life,'' Nice said. "These kids should be celebrating graduation and prom, I assume? They should be doing kid stuff, and it is a travesty and a waste of our judicial process to have to go through this.''
She said Gomes da Silva was confined to a room holding 25 to 35 men, many twice his age, most of the time he was detained, with no windows, time outside, privacy to use the restroom or permission to shower. Nice said that at one point Gomes da Silva, who is active in his local church, asked for a Bible and was denied.