Sports
The Surfer Review
“Born in a storm way out to sea. Brewing and churning for days, weeks, months, sometimes even years, and it’s all building to this breaking point – short sharp shock of violence on the shore – and you either surf it or you get wiped out.” Thus, Nicolas Cage‘s unnamed surfer character tells his unnamed […]


“Born in a storm way out to sea. Brewing and churning for days, weeks, months, sometimes even years, and it’s all building to this breaking point – short sharp shock of violence on the shore – and you either surf it or you get wiped out.” Thus, Nicolas Cage‘s unnamed surfer character tells his unnamed teenage son (Finn Little) in The Surfer. Cage can’t believe his son’s apathetic reaction. “You know, that was my best surfing-as-a-metaphor-for-life speech, I was hoping for a little more enthusiasm.” As the endowment of wisdom goes from inside the car to the beautiful vistas of Luna Bay, it’s clear the man sharing the metaphor doesn’t understand it.
His marriage is in shambles, trouble at work, and the dream of buying his childhood home is gone. The Surfer is a testament to the pending violence he references. The Surfer’s dream of sharing the water with his son is short-lived, and the last push he needs to reach his breaking point. Scally (Julian McMahon), the handsome, charming leader of the Bay Boys, prevents anyone but locals from hitting the waves. Some tourists are content with a warning; others catch a beating. You can imagine which type of man the Surfer is.
Previously a top dog in the boardroom, the Surfer mistakenly assumes that means anything in real life. The crew of virile young beach rats remind him otherwise. The Surfer retreats to the parking lot for sympathy, but locals are all too happy to keep the violence contained to the beach, lest Scally goes after one of them. We allow poison to manifest because we don’t want to be the ones to deal with it, which is a recurring motif of the film. As played by McMahon, Scally is an undeniable force with a magnetic draw to him, even as he commits horrible acts. Scally knows his cult can get away with anything.
Watching the Surfer continuously fail drives his son away. His wedding ring and father’s watch are gone. Only the tattered suit on his back remains. But leaving the beach never crosses the Surfer’s mind. To suffer this humiliation would be the last straw. His childhood memories of surfing that beach are the only pure moments of his life that he has left. Not recreating those moments drives the Surfer to the breaking point. Living in the parking lot, with only Bum (Nicholas Cassim) for conversation, the Surfer breaks down. Frustrations mount as the smothering Australian heat takes its toll, and the Surfer sees Bum as a crystallization of how his life ends: a deranged weirdo mumbling to himself in a parking lot until the end of his days.
There’s a rich tradition of films where men go to Australia and lose their minds (Wake in Fright, Road Games, Long Weekend), but none of those films have Nicolas Cage. The Surfer’s masculinity is in crisis, but Scally seems well-off. Soon, Scally’s absurd mantra, “Before you can surf, you must suffer,” starts making sense to the Surfer. It’s not that the abusive leader of beach weirdos has been the one torturing him, no. Scally’s enlightening him. But the Surfer wasn’t receptive to his messaging before. The crash of the waves becomes a droning noise you can’t escape. The ocean’s draw impossible to ignore, you start to listen to the drone for clues, deciphering meaning from the static.
Lorcan Finnegan’s previous films have a flair for the surreal (Vivarium, Nocebo), and The Surfer is no different. While those films had fantastical premises, this film relies on Cage to portray a downward spiral. When Cage goes for it—and he often does—he needs to play off another actor. Too often low-budget films don’t give him a sparring partner. McMahon, with his deranged smile and masculine bravado, is more than game to match insanity with Cage. Cage’s commitment to playing the slow unraveling of a man’s sanity is always fun (his gonzo performance elevated Mandy to a cult classic), and it’s no different with this film. It’s a role that Cage does well and often.
Finnegan wears the audience down as harshly as his leading man. The mystic score drones on as the color palette takes on darker hues, burning Cage’s skin and, in the process, our retinas. The parking lot, where most of the film resides, takes on a hellish quality. The cinematography cued into the heat radiating off the asphalt. The water is the only refreshing thing on the screen, but, like the Surfer, we can’t go there. We can only embrace the storm.
The Surfer rides into theatres on May 2, 2025.
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Water Polo team named for Men’s European Qualification Tournament | Water Polo News
Head Coach Tim Dunsbee, alongside Assistant Coach Ian MacCullum and Team Manager Terri Halstead, have selected a group mixed with experience, skill and promising young talent that will be looking to secure their spot at next year’s Championships. The squad contains five of the players that helped the team to tenth at the World Cup […]

Head Coach Tim Dunsbee, alongside Assistant Coach Ian MacCullum and Team Manager Terri Halstead, have selected a group mixed with experience, skill and promising young talent that will be looking to secure their spot at next year’s Championships.
The squad contains five of the players that helped the team to tenth at the World Cup Water Polo World Cup in December, including Kameron Powell, Jordan Elliot and Tom Manley.
Drawn in Group A – one of four groups in the qualification phase – Great Britain will face the Netherlands, Poland, Czechia, and hosts Slovenia over three days in the countries third-largest city.
A top-two finish is required to advance to the finals, with the leading teams from each group forming Division Two of the European Championships, set to take place in Serbia in January 2026.
Success in Slovenia would see the men’s team join the women’s squad at the major event, following their historic qualification in 2024.
Despite a challenging group, the squad has been training intensively to prepare for the task ahead. A 13-11 victory over Sweden in an international friendly during an overseas training camp was followed up with testing fixtures against Ukraine (8-20 loss), Slovakia (7-20 loss), Slovenia (8-16 loss) and Israel (8-14 loss) at the Danube Cup in Slovakia as part of their final preparations.
Commenting on the team’s European Aquatics Qualification Round preparations following the Danube Cub, Head Coach Tim Dunsbee said: “It’s been a tough tournament with some hard-fought games, but we’ve seen clear improvement with each match. This is a young squad still finding its feet and the progress so far is encouraging. We’re building something and looking forward to taking the next step in Slovenia next week.”
Live streaming of matches is reported to be available through EuroAquaticsTV.com, with the full schedule and results available on the Microplus website.
Sports
Trio Knights track and field athletes reach state podium | News, Sports, Jobs
Union’s Cooper Davis takes off after receiving the handoff from teammate Brayden Bohnsack (left) during the Class 2A boys 4×800 meter relay at the state track meet on Thursday, May 22, in Des Moines. The Knights set a personal record during the event, finishing 12th with a time of 8:14.67. PHOTO […]

- Union’s Cooper Davis takes off after receiving the handoff from teammate Brayden Bohnsack (left) during the Class 2A boys 4×800 meter relay at the state track meet on Thursday, May 22, in Des Moines. The Knights set a personal record during the event, finishing 12th with a time of 8:14.67. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
- Union senior Kate Carlson runs the second leg of the girls 4×800 meter relay at the 2025 Iowa High School Track & Field Championships on Drake University’s Blue Oval in Des Moines. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
- Union sprinter Levi Hadachek, right, competes in the finals of the Class 2A boys 100-meter dash at the 2025 Iowa High School Track & Field Championships in Des Moines on Saturday, May 24. After being seeded 18th, Hadachek took seventh with a time of 11.10 seconds. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
- Union’s Luke Winkelpleck (right) hands off the baton to anchor Levi Hadachek during the Class 2A boys 4X200 relay during the state track meet in Des Moines on Friday, May 23. Union finished 13th out of 24 teams in the event. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
- PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
- PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE

Union sprinter Levi Hadachek, right, competes in the finals of the Class 2A boys 100-meter dash at the 2025 Iowa High School Track & Field Championships in Des Moines on Saturday, May 24. After being seeded 18th, Hadachek took seventh with a time of 11.10 seconds. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
DES MOINES – After qualifying a bumper crop of 19 events for this year’s Iowa High School Track & Field Championships which took place May 22-24 at Drake Stadium in Des Moines, three Union track and field athletes made it all the way to the Class 2A podium (top-8) including senior Amilia Condon, junior Levi Hadachek, and senior Justice Luke.
Luke took fifth in the boys high jump with a leap of 6 feet, 3 inches – setting a personal record and defying his 13th seeding. After clearing the starting height (5 feet, 11 inches) on his first attempt, Luke then cleared the next height (6 feet, 1 inch) on his second try. With the bar subsequently moved up to 6 feet, 3 inches, Luke again managed to clear on his second attempt before failing all three attempts at 6 feet, 5 inches.
The 2A high jump champion this year was Camanche senior Tyson Seeser who cleared 6 feet, 8 inches on his first attempt.
Hadachek also medaled for the Knights after finishing seventh in the boys 100-meter dash with a time of 11.10 seconds. Hadachek was seeded 18th ahead of the event. In the preliminaries, he also finished seventh with a time of 11.02 seconds. The 2A boys 100 champion was No. 22 seed Brandon Pedersen of West Branch who captured gold with a time of 10.73 seconds.
Rounding out the Knights medals this year was senior distance runner Condon who crossed the finish in eighth place during the girls 3,000-meter run with a time of 10 minutes, 38.80 seconds, setting a personal record. Condon, a senior seeded No. 3 in the event, was part of a record-setting race which saw six new Iowa High School Outdoor Rankings set along with three new U.S. High School Outdoor Rankings including the champion Noelle Steines of Tipton whose 9:53.95 finish set the new No. 3 for Iowa and No. 32 for the U.S.

Union’s Luke Winkelpleck (right) hands off the baton to anchor Levi Hadachek during the Class 2A boys 4X200 relay during the state track meet in Des Moines on Friday, May 23. Union finished 13th out of 24 teams in the event. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
Condon also competed individually in the girls 1,500-meter run, crossing the finish 13th with a time of 4:57.68 – beating her 2024 finish of 5:07.99.
Union’s 2025 state track and field finishes also included:
9 – Boys 4×100 relay (Evan Hanus, Trevor Clark, Garrett Kaalberg, Levi Hadachek): 43.38 (new school record)
12 – Boys 4×800 relay (Brayden Bohnsack, Cooper Davis, Jackson Youngblut, Sawyer Spence): 8:14.67 (personal record)
13 – Boys 4×200 relay (Evan Hanus, Trevor Clark, Luke Winkelpleck, Levi Hadachek): 1:31.10

Union senior Kate Carlson runs the second leg of the girls 4×800 meter relay at the 2025 Iowa High School Track & Field Championships on Drake University’s Blue Oval in Des Moines. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
13 – Justice Luke, boys 110-meter hurdles: 15.65 (personal record)
14 – Girls 4X800 relay (Brynn Albertsen, Kate Carlson, Lily Lorenzen, Amilia Condon): 10:07.65
15 – Ethan Winnike, boys high jump: 5 feet, 11 inches
17 – Eric Neipert, boys discus throw: 138 feet, 9 inches
18 – Boys distance medley relay (Garrett Kaalberg, Luke Winkelpleck, Caden Sorensen, Sawyer Spence): 3:39.17

Union’s Cooper Davis takes off after receiving the handoff from teammate Brayden Bohnsack (left) during the Class 2A boys 4×800 meter relay at the state track meet on Thursday, May 22, in Des Moines. The Knights set a personal record during the event, finishing 12th with a time of 8:14.67. PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
20 – Girls 4X100 shuttle hurdle relay (Ruby Parson, Caitlyn Schneider, Reese Andersen, Mara Tudor): 1:11.63
20 – Girls 4X400 relay (Kate Carlson, Brynn Albertsen, Chloe Sadler, Katie Jackson): 4:13.04 (season best)
21 – Kate Carlson, girls 400-meter dash: 1:01.83
21 – Lily Lorenzen, girls high jump: 4 feet, 10 inches
21 – Taylen Smith, girls long jump: 15 feet, 3 1/4 inches

PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
21 – Girls distance medley relay (Bianca Grimm, Ruby Parson, Chloe Sadler, Amilia Condon): 4:23.82 (season best)
24 – Boys 4X400 relay (Luke Winkelpleck, Caden Sorensen, Jase Loveless, Brayden Bohnsack): 3:34.69

PHOTO BY ROSS THEDE
Sports
MSU track sends first relay team to NCAA Nationals
BOZEMAN, Mont. — Montana State University track and field will make program history in Eugene, Oregon, as the Bobcats are sending its first-ever relay team to compete in the women’s 4x400m at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships. “We honestly didn’t know that we were the first team to make it,” MSU junior Peyton […]

BOZEMAN, Mont. — Montana State University track and field will make program history in Eugene, Oregon, as the Bobcats are sending its first-ever relay team to compete in the women’s 4x400m at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.
“We honestly didn’t know that we were the first team to make it,” MSU junior Peyton Garrison said. “Some of the pictures that were shown, we were jumping in excitement and we’re just so excited.”
But the manner in which the MSU relay team reached the championships required a little help from the rule book.
The team of Corvallis native and freshman Olivia Lewis, Garrison, junior Giula Gandolfi, and junior Caroline Hawkes finished with a time of 3:34.31, second-fastest in school history, to take 13th place at the NCAA West First Round in College Station, TX. The top 12 teams, top three from each heat and the next three fastest times, advanced to nationals, meaning the Bobcats were the first team out of the field.
However, those lows quickly turned to highs as a Northern Arizona team that made the top 12 from an earlier heat was disqualified. NAU protested the disqualification, and after waiting hours under the night sky and with the stadium empty, Montana State officially booked a ticket to Eugene.
“We were for sure sad, because we were the last team out, and then a couple of us girls looked up on the TV, and the TV had said that we had made it,” Garrison said.
“The relays are difficult, because it’s not just one person, you have to have four people, and they have to be at an incredibly high level,” MSU head track and field coach Lyle Weese said. “To get a relay into the NCAA Championships, it really signifies the level that the long sprints women’s program is at.”
For Garrison and Gandolfi, it wasn’t their first race in the NCAA West First Round. Both competed in individual events two days earlier with Garrison placing 42nd in the 200m and Gandolfi taking 27th in the 400m hurdles.
“We were a little nervous before the 4×4, of course you have to be, but I think it definitely helped having another race,” Garrison said. “We can get the energy out, the nervousness out, and I think that helped a lot.”
“I think it’s always a balance of competing, recovering from that, and going on to the next event in the meet,” Weese said. “I’m a big believer that if you have competed in an event at a meet, a lot of times it’s easier from the mental side and pressure side to compete in that second event.”
But it was Hawkes as the anchor leg that helped propel the Bobcats into nationals. After receiving the baton from Gandolfi, Hawkes moved the team from seventh to fourth in the heat, including beating out Oklahoma State by nine hundredths of a second for the final spot in nationals.
“It was amazing. Caroline always pulls through, Caroline is always the hardest worker out here, and that’s also another big reason why we are out here,” Garrison said.
“That was probably the best relay leg or the best 400m that Caroline has ever run,” Weese said. “The first 200m she was moving like crazy and making up a lot of ground, and she caught up to some of those individuals that she ended up passing them.”
MSU will look to take advantage of its opportunity on the highest stage as the Bobcat relay team shares a final race of the season together and represents a growing women’s program.
“We have a really close 4×4 team, and so all of us are best friends, we work together every single day. We show up to the track, we work together, we go out to eat together and we spend so much time,” Garrison said. “Being so close and being friendly, and we love each other so much, and that makes us work hard for each other. I think that’s why we made it.”
“It’s really built upon itself,” Weese said on the success of the MSU women. “It’s been that situation where they’ve raised each other’s ability level, but to see so many school records from every event group is really an exciting thing for our program, and also that so many of them will be back for future years.”
The Montana State relay team will compete in the semifinals of the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene on Thursday at 7:36 p.m. PST. If they advance to the finals, the Bobcats will compete on Saturday, June 14 at 8:21 p.m. PST.
Sports
Texas’ Women’s College World Series title narrows Learfield Directors’ Cup path for USC
Friday evening was quite eventful in college sports. Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement deal that will shape the future of how USC navigates the terrain of college athletics. Around the same time, Texas defeated Texas Tech during the NCAA College Softball World Series. As shared by Arrogant Nation on X, this makes the […]

Friday evening was quite eventful in college sports. Judge Claudia Wilken approved the House settlement deal that will shape the future of how USC navigates the terrain of college athletics. Around the same time, Texas defeated Texas Tech during the NCAA College Softball World Series.
As shared by Arrogant Nation on X, this makes the path toward a potential Learfield Directors’ Cup victory for the Trojans narrower. It does, however, make it a two-school race now, exclusively between USC and Texas. Before the Longhorns’ victory, there was still an outside shot of Stanford being able to win the overall collegiate title. For those noticing, Learfield is also the recently announced marketing company that has now partnered with USC.
Everything will now come down to the track and field events at the NCAA championships in Eugene, Oregon, that will take place starting on Wednesday, June 11th.
It goes without saying that the Trojan athletes who have qualified for their respective events on the national stage will need to perform well and have a number of first-place finishes in Eugene in order for USC to take the lead from Texas.
If the Longhorns underperform, however, there will be a Trojan victory for the Directors’ Cup. Considering how well-rounded and how much depth this Director Quincy Watts roster has for both teams, it should not be dismissed already.
First or second will now fall on USC T&F team’s shoulders
Track and field, like any of the other sports, is something that can have athletes have an off-day or perform even above the high expectations that someone had entering into the event. Between all of the athletes who have qualified for the NCAA championships and the season of success that these two squads have already had and displayed, a Trojan T&F victory could very easily mean this additional overarching victory as well, even with this latest Texas win in softball.
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Marlborough App
Grantee Neve McKenzie addresses the audience at the Inspire Foundation evening. Photo: William Woodworth. Talented young Marlburians were acknowledged and supported on Friday when the next recipients of Inspire Foundation grants were announced. The May 2025 Grantees’ Award Ceremony saw six new grantees and seven re-grants. The gathered guests also heard from guest speaker, renowned […]

Grantee Neve McKenzie addresses the audience at the Inspire Foundation evening. Photo: William Woodworth.
Talented young Marlburians were acknowledged and supported on Friday when the next recipients of Inspire Foundation grants were announced.
The May 2025 Grantees’ Award Ceremony saw six new grantees and seven re-grants. The gathered guests also heard from guest speaker, renowned golf caddy Steve Williams, and raised invaluable funds from the Fundraising auction run by two-time Australasian auction champion Phil McGoldrick.
New grantees announced on the night were Amber Bendell for hip hop, Ella Sowman for tennis, Neve Mckenzie for triathlon, Olivia Cooke for community work with scouts, Scott Keay for water polo and Sophia Nicholas for touch. Re-grants were awarded to Finn Mckenzie for road cycling, Kyla Thorstensen for softball, Luka van Rensburg for cornet, Alex Craig for mountain biking, Erin Green for track cycling, Gus Marfell for triathlon and Isabella Baldwin for jazz.
“We continue to be amazed at the young talented individuals that apply each year,” says Inspire Foundation Marlborough Chairman Mark Davis.
“Our Inspire family is growing and the grants sometimes mean the difference between being able to attend events or not, so it is important that we are able to support our young superstars in the pursuit of their dreams,” he says.
Sports
‘Deplorable:’ 11th grader held by ICE shines spotlight on conditions
“This kid has been sleeping on a cement floor for five days, no access to a shower; he’s brushed his teeth twice,” said Marcelo Gomes da Silva’s immigration attorney. Massachusetts teen detained by ICE released after 6 days in custody A Massachusetts high school student arrested by immigration agents on his way to volleyball practice […]

“This kid has been sleeping on a cement floor for five days, no access to a shower; he’s brushed his teeth twice,” said Marcelo Gomes da Silva’s immigration attorney.

Massachusetts teen detained by ICE released after 6 days in custody
A Massachusetts high school student arrested by immigration agents on his way to volleyball practice has been released from custody.
Fox – Seattle
- The isolation that da Silva subsequently endured made him so “desperately lonely” that he took to banging on the walls of his cell to get someone to come talk to him, his lawyer told USA TODAY.
MILFORD, MASSACHUSETTS − Sleeping on a cement floor in a windowless room. Only brushing your teeth twice in five days and never getting to shower. Being mocked by a guard.
These are among the “horrendous conditions” that Massachusetts high school junior Marcelo Gomes da Silva endured while being held by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, according to his lawyer Robin Nice.
Gomes Da Silva, 18, was arrested by ICE agents on May 31 when he was stopped on his way to volleyball practice with friends in his hometown of Milford. Federal officials said they targeted da Silva’s father, Joao Paulo Gomes-Pereira, who they say is an undocumented immigrant from Brazil, but they detained Gomes da Silva − who came to the United States at the age of 7 with his parents − when they realized he had overstayed his visa.
According to Nice, Gomes Da Silva was subsequently detained for five nights in cells that are intended to hold detainees for hours before being transferred. The cells lack access to basic amenities like beds and showers.
“The Burlington (Massachusetts) facility is not a detention center, it’s a holding cell,” Nice told USA TODAY after a June 5 hearing in Gomes da Silva’s case, which has drawn nationwide attention and fervent local opposition to his detention and possible deportation.
“It’s deplorable,” she added.
Nice first raised the issue in a federal immigration court hearing on whether he would be granted bail.
“He’s being held in just awful conditions no one should be subjected to: sleeping on a cement floor for just a few hours per night,” Nice began, before she was cut off by Immigration Judge Jenny Beverly, who noted the hearing was not the proper venue to raise the issue.
Shackles, teasing, and solitary confinement
Nice provided more details on her client’s confinement in a press conference after the hearing, in which the judge set a $2,000 bond for Gomes da Silva’s release, and in a subsequent interview with USA TODAY.
“This kid has been sleeping on a cement floor for five days, no access to a shower, he’s brushed his teeth twice. He’s sharing a room with men twice his age,” Nice said at the press conference outside the Chelmsford, Massachusetts federal immigration court.
At one point, Gomes da Silva was taken to a hospital emergency room because he was suffering severe headaches and vision loss stemming from a high school volleyball injury days earlier. When he was transferred to and from the hospital, he was handcuffed and kept in leg shackles and then moved to a different room, Nice said.
“He got back to the holding facility at 4 am and then was put in what I would refer to as solitary confinement: it was a room without anyone else, and all of these rooms that people are held in, there is no window,” Nice said. “There is no yard time, because it’s not set up for that.”
“If you are detained in the Burlington ICE facility, you do not see the light of day,” she said. “You don’t know what time it is.”
The isolation that da Silva subsequently endured made him so “desperately lonely” that he took to banging on the walls of his cell to get someone to come talk to him, Nice told USA TODAY. The guards, who he said mostly ignored him, nicknamed him “the knocker” in response.
When Gomes da Silva was held in the room with a larger group, one of the guards played a cruel practical joke on the detainees, Nice said:
“He said when ICE opens the door it means either someone’s coming in or someone’s getting released, so everyone perks up when they open the door. So he sees in a little slit in the door window, one ICE officer motion to another and says ‘watch this,’ and so one ICE officer opens the door to the cell and just stands their for a minute and then says, ‘psych!’ And closes the door. And everyone had just perked up,” Nice recounted.
The isolation in the ICE holding facility extended beyond its walls, Nice said. There was no way for her to call her client there, and he could only make one call for two minutes per day − and not even every day.
Nice wasn’t able to get in to see Gomes da Silva until the fifth day of his confinement. He was so shut off from the outside world that he didn’t know his varsity volleyball team had lost in the semi-finals of the state tournament, even though the match drew media coverage.
ICE did not respond to USA TODAY’s request for comment on Nice’s allegations.
In a statement on June 2, Patricia Hyde, acting field director for ICE Enforcement and Removal Operations’ in Boston defended Gomes da Silva’s detention and said the agency intends to pursue deportation proceedings.
“When we go into the community and find others who are unlawfully here, we’re going to arrest them,” Hyde said. “He’s 18 years old and he’s illegally in this country. We had to go to Milford looking for someone else and if we come across someone else who is here illegally, we’re going to arrest them.”
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‘Nobody deserves to be down there’
Later on June 5, Gomes da Silva himself addressed reporters after posting the $2,000 bond and being released.
“Nobody deserves to be down there,” da Silva told reporters. “You sleep on concrete floors. The bathroom — I have to use the bathroom in the open with like 35-year-old men. It’s humiliating.”
Gomes da Silva also said they were given only crackers for lunch and dinner. Nice told USA TODAY he was also fed what he described as an undefined “mush” that was “like oatmeal, but not oatmeal.”
A twice-weekly churchgoer, Gomes da Silva asked the guards for a bible but was not provided with one.
Beside him were U.S. Reps. Seth Moulton and Jake Auchincloss, both Democrats from Massachusetts, who said they returned from Washington, D.C., on Thursday to speak with da Silva and to inspect the detention center.
Consequences of an immigration crackdown
The Trump administration has sought to ramp up deportations of undocumented immigrants, including those like da Silva who were brought here as children and have no criminal record. ICE reported holding 46,269 people in custody in mid-March, well above the agency’s detention capacity of 41,500 beds.
USA TODAY has previously reported on allegations of conditions in ICE detention similar to what Gomes da Silva and Nice described.
In March, four women held at the Krome North Processing Center in Miami said they were chained for hours on a prison bus without access to food, water or a toilet. They also alleged they were told by guards to urinate on the floor, slept on a concrete floor, and only got one three-minute shower over the course of three or four days in custody.
The allegations come after two men at Krome died in custody on Jan. 23 and Feb. 20.
Contributing: Caitlin Kelleher, USA TODAY NETWORK, Lauren Villagran, USA TODAY.
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