
Milford, Massachusetts high school student detained by ICE was "targeted," girlfriend says
The latest details as the Milford community rallies in support of a student detained by ICE
The latest details as the Milford community rallies in support of a student detained by ICE
The latest details as the Milford community rallies in support of a student detained by ICE
Marcelo Gomes, a Massachusetts high school student who was suddenly detained on his way to volleyball practice over the weekend, was still being held by the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Monday.
Gomes, an 18-year-old junior at Milford High School, was one of four volleyball players on their way to practice Saturday morning when three unmarked vehicles pulled up being them. One of the students in the car told WBZ-TV that's when an ICE agent knocked on the window.
Marcelo Gomes
Gomes family photo
"They asked him what his documentation was," said the student, who did not want to be identified because he is also undocumented. The agent questioned everyone in the car and Gomes was taken into custody, separating him from his friends and family. The student who spoke to WBZ said he was not detained because he is underage.
"He's been here 13 years"
"He's been here for 13 years. This is all he knows. Milford and Massachusetts is all he knows," said Gomes's cousin Ana Julia Araujo.
"It's kind of heart-breaking. Marcelo is such a kind person and he's the last person that this should be happening to, I guess. His siblings are so young and they're asking questions like, whether they're ever going to see him again," Araujo said.
She said he was supposed to play the drums at Milford High School's graduation Sunday. Instead, the community held a rally for him at town hall. That brought Araujo hope.
"It makes me really happy, because I don't think the community would come together like this for any other person. It shows how special he is," she said.
Held at ICE detention center in Burlington
Araujo said Gomes was able to call his parents and that he's currently being held at an ICE detention center in Burlington.
There has been no comment from ICE about the Gomes case. U.S. Attorney Leah Foley will have a news conference with the agency Monday at 11:30 a.m. in Boston to discuss the immigration enforcement surge in Massachusetts.
Milford Police Chief Robert Dusino said his department didn't learn about Gomes's detention until after it happened.
"We want an open dialogue with the federal government about who's getting detained, why they're getting detained. We don't want people just coming into town and being detained or arrested solely because they're here illegally," he told reporters.
"He was targeted"
"Marcelo was a good kid. He was excited for his future. He did absolutely nothing wrong. He was innocently going to a practice and he was targeted," said Gomes's girlfriend Julianys Rentas, who graduated from Milford High School Sunday.
She said many students are living in fear of ICE.
"There's no patterns, so no one knows who's next," Rentas said.
Cherie Peterson, who taught English to Gomes, said students "deserve to feel safe."
"I can't image how scared he is. He doesn't know how to navigate this system. I wouldn't know how to navigate this system," she said.
Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey said she wants ICE to provide "immediate information about why he was arrested, where he is and how his due process is being protected."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
13 minutes ago
- Fox News
Ex-sheriff accused of shooting judge in chambers says state skirted law, should toss murder case: report
The attorneys representing the former Letcher County, Kentucky sheriff who stands accused of murdering the county's judge in his chambers have filed a new motion to have their client's indictment dismissed, according to a report. Former sheriff Shawn "Mickey" Stines' lawyers say the state failed to record a November 2024 meeting between state prosecutors and the Letcher County grand jury that eventually indicted Stines, according to a court filing obtained by KAVE. The filing says the grand jury was "deprived of information known to the Commonwealth [of Kentucky], sought in question by grand jurors, but not disclosed." Stines allegedly shot District Judge Kevin Mullins in Mullins' own chambers in the Letcher County Courthouse on Sept. 19, 2024. The incident, which rocked the tiny rural town, was caught on a surveillance camera. Both Stines and Mullins were well-known pillars of the community for decades. Specifically, the motion filed by attorney duo Jeremy and Kerri Bartley says the grand jury was denied information about an ongoing civil lawsuit, in which Stines is named as a defendant, that could provide context for the shooting. The lawyers also claim that testimony before the grand jury from Kentucky State Police Detective Clayton Stamper, the lead investigator in the case, was unfairly prejudicial. Stines' attorneys claim that allegations of sexual abuse plagued the Letcher County Courthouse. Just three days before the shooting, Stines was deposed in a civil case against his former deputy, Ben Fields, who is currently serving prison time for raping a woman inside the courthouse in exchange for removing her ankle monitor while she was on home confinement during criminal proceedings. Jeremy Bartley told Fox News Digital that the sheriff had threatened to keep his mouth shut in the civil case, and that he feared for the safety of his wife and daughter. "On the day that this [shooting] happened, my client had attempted multiple times to contact his wife and daughter, and he firmly believed that they were in danger," Bartley said. "He believed that they were in danger because of what he knew to have happened within the courthouse. And there was pressure, and there were threats made to him to sort of keep him in line, to keep them from saying more than these folks wanted him to say." "I think one of the big things is that my client felt there had been pressure placed on him not to say too much during the deposition, and not to talk about things that happened within the courthouse, particularly in the judge's chambers," Bartley said. Body camera footage from the immediate aftermath of the shooting shows a paranoid Stines afraid for his life while being questioned by police. "Come on, be fair to me now," Stines can be heard saying to Stamper. "I seen the look… Y'all come on now, don't kill me. Don't punish me, you know. Let's be fair. Don't shoot me, nothing like that." "Y'all are gonna kill me, aren't you?" he asked. "Y'all are gonna kill me, I know you are. Let's just get it over with. Let's just go." Bartley is planning an insanity defense. Experts have denounced that defense as "frivolous." Fox News Digital reached out to Bartley and prosecutor Jackie Steele for comment.

Wall Street Journal
14 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
Why Would Musk Pick This Fight with Trump?
They were powerful together. But now the clash between the president and the world's richest man threatens to tear their ambitions apart—if they can't find a way to detente.


CNN
14 minutes ago
- CNN
Lost DoorDash driver ends up on the tarmac at O'Hare Airport
Surveillance video shows a DoorDash delivery driver accidentally entering an 'unauthorized secured area' at Chicago O'Hare Airport, according to police. The driver pulled up near parked planes before being stopped by airport staff.