
A Massachusetts man was deported to Brazil after honking at an undercover ICE vehicle—an encounter that led to his arrest, a rushed deportation, and the unraveling of his partner's family.
Samarone Alves Ferreira-De Souza, a Worcester resident and father of a 4-month-old child, was detained by ICE on May 7 while driving to work, according to Mass Live. The arrest, which followed a minor traffic incident with undercover agents, triggered a cascade of detentions involving his partner's family and raised questions about ICE's adherence to due process.
Ferreira-De Souza was held at a detention center in Louisiana, where, according to his attorney, ICE officials signed deportation documents on his behalf—despite his refusal. He was deported to Fortaleza, Brazil, on May 25 without access to legal counsel in the final days of his detention.
His partner, Augusta Clara Moura, will fly to Brazil with their baby on June 6 to reunite with him, the outlet reported. Meanwhile, Moura's mother remains in ICE custody and her younger siblings have been placed in state care.
ICE has not publicly commented on the deportation or the claims that it bypassed required legal protocols. The lawyer representing Ferreira-De Souza described the incident as part of a broader pattern of rights violations.
While Ferreira-De Souza has chosen not to challenge his deportation, citing exhaustion, the incident has intensified scrutiny on ICE operations and prompted calls for greater transparency.
Originally published on Lawyer Herald