Wife of man detained by ICE in hallway of Franklin County traffic court says community is ‘very afraid'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (WCMH) — Surveillance video from the Franklin County Municipal Court shows a man being detained by ICE in a hallway after appearing in traffic court.
The man, Leonardo Fausto, of Westerville, was in court on June 3 for operating a motor vehicle without a valid license — a misdemeanor charge that was dismissed. He pleaded guilty to driving 70 mph in a 45 mph zone and was fined $100 plus another $102 in costs for a total of $202, online records show.
The case has been closed.
Columbus social media influencer pleads guilty to $20 million Ponzi scheme
Surveillance video from the hallway outside of the courtroom shows Fausto leaving when a man in a baseball cap and plainclothes stops him in the hallway. The man in the cap is seen talking to Fausto before he places him in handcuffs. Fausto is then escorted out of the courthouse.
The video does not have audio.
The case has caught the attention of community activists and state leaders.
Fausto is in the country legally, but he is not a citizen. Right now, he's jailed in Butler County.
NBC4 Investigates has spent the last week meticulously digging into what happened and how. We talked to the man's lawyer, his wife, and worked our sources to get the video and learn what ICE agents can and can't do when detaining someone.
The Faustos came to central Ohio four years ago from Brazil, seeking asylum. Their case was denied, and their lawyer appealed.
They are legally allowed to stay in the United States while they wait for their appeal to be decided.
'We could not identify them by ICE officers because they were not wearing a vest and they also did not have a badge,' said Fausto's wife, through a translator. She asked not to be identified by name.
State, federal cannabis changes threaten Ohio festival's future
ICE agents must identify themselves and show credentials before they make an arrest. They are allowed to be in plainclothes.
Fausto's wife speaks Portuguese, and NBC4 spoke with her through a translator, as she shared the moment on June 3, when she found out her husband was detained.
'I got a call, it was about 12:30, and I got desperate,' Fausto's wife said. 'I was with the kids — with the three kids — and I didn't know where to start. It was just going through my head, what am I going to do? I am alone.'
Fausto's lawyer, Walter Messenger, said ICE told him Fausto had missed an immigration hearing, which the lawyer said is not true.
'I've attended every hearing with him,' Messenger said.
Fausto works in construction during the week. On weekends, he and his wife sell pizza. They're involved in church, and their youngest child is a U.S. citizen — born after they fled Brazil.
'We love this place, but since we don't have a citizenship, we don't have documents,' Fausto's wife said. 'We are just exposed to what is happening now.'
They left Brazil after threats toward their family, and came to central Ohio seeking asylum, which is a form of protection that allows people to remain in a country instead of returning home, where they face harm.
'There is a provision in their order of supervision that they can't violate any ordinances, that's one way, you know, they are able to detain,' Messenger said. 'But in the past, this has never been a problem. ICE would not go to courthouses in Franklin County and pick up someone after they paid a speeding ticket unless there was another serious crime involved.'
In this case, there is no other crime alleged. Fausto pleaded guilty to speeding and was picked up by ICE on his way down the hall to pay the fine.
'I explain to my oldest that we are in a country that it's not our country and they don't want us, but we have to do everything we can,' Fausto's wife said. 'We have to do what is right. I explain that his daddy is in prison, but that his daddy will be out soon. That we have to pray to God.'
Fausto's lawyer is working to get him released from Butler County. The lawyer has to prove Fausto will attend all his court hearings and is not a danger to the community.
'That's going to be easy because he hasn't committed any crimes,' Messenger said. 'We also have to prove that he's going to show up to his court hearings. That's going to be easy because I've attended every hearing with him.'
'Our community is very afraid,' Fausto's wife said. 'People are afraid to leave their houses. People are afraid to go to work. People are very afraid to walk on the streets. We need to ask help to whoever we can help us. I need to ask help for whoever can help my husband.'
NBC4 Investigates received a statement from a representative with Franklin County Municipal Court stating, 'The court's longstanding practice has been to allow law enforcement to operate in public areas outside the courtrooms.'
In Common Pleas court, where usually more serious cases are heard, the court has issued two new rules, stating the court 'prohibits civil arrests without a judicial warrant within the courthouse grounds' and it 'prohibits arrests by judicial warrant within the Judges' courtrooms, except when enforcement agencies have requested and received written approval of a Judge.'
Fausto's lawyer said a federal ICE agent detained Fausto. NBC4 reached out to the federal media contact for ICE and has not yet received a response. We also reached out to the offices of U.S. Senators Bernie Moreno and Jon Husted for comment but have not yet received a response.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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


CBS News
18 minutes ago
- CBS News
Denver ICE claims Colorado advocacy group helped fugitive escape arrest
ICE Denver said a Colorado immigration advocacy group helped a fugitive escape when they attempted to arrest him Friday. According to ICE officials, Jose Reyes Leon-Deras of El Salvador was convicted of and wanted for child rape in Italy. The organization said that members of Colorado Rapid Response alerted him that law enforcement officers were in the area, and he escaped. ICE Denver A Facebook post on Thursday on the organization's page announced ICE officers were near Longs Peak Avenue and Martin Street in Longmont, and their volunteers were assisting those being targeted. Authorities told the public not to approach Leon-Deras and asked anyone with information on his location to contact them. CBS Colorado Rapid Response Network is an immigration advocacy group that responds to raids, deportations and ICE enforcement across the state. According to the group, volunteers observe and record the event, identify the agents at the scene and inform those involved of their constitutional rights. This incident comes amid rising tensions between immigrant communities, advocates and immigration officials. In the wake of large protests in Los Angeles and several other cities, President Trump directed federal immigration officials to prioritize deportation in Democratic run cities last week. The increase in arrests and deportations is part of the administration's crackdown on undocumented immigrants and those who enter the country illegally.


New York Post
18 minutes ago
- New York Post
Anti-ICE protests to cost Los Angeles taxpayers over $30M: official
Anti-ICE protests that rattled Los Angeles will cost taxpayers in the City of Angels a whopping $32 million, according to newly released data. The eye-watering sum includes the cost of police response, emergency services, cleanup and public property damage resulting from federal immigration protests that have rattled the city, LA City Controller Kenneth Mejia revealed in a post on X. Some $29.5 million of the costs come from the LAPD's response to protests, 'including citywide tactical alert costs,' Mejia said, sharing a graph breakdown of the taxpayer funds. Anti-ICE protests will cost Los Angeles taxpayers a whopping $32,042,107, according to newly released data. LA City Controller Kenneth Mejia Another $1.4 million will be used for clean-up and public property damage, according to the post. The remainder of the money includes funds set aside for the Los Angeles Fire Department, street services, general services and the Public Works Board. Downtown LA has become the epicenter of anti-ICE riots in response to Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration. Since June 8, the LAPD has made roughly 561 arrests related to protests, cops said, according to KTLA. Downtown Los Angeles has become the epicenter of anti-ICE riots in response to Trump's crackdown on illegal immigration. Toby Canham for NY Post More than 200 people were arrested on June 10 alone after Mayor Karen Bass instituted a curfew in Los Angeles. 'The most explosive escalation of tensions between demonstrators and police since the height of the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020 is currently unfolding in Los Angeles over Trump's 'mass deportation agenda,'' said Kieran Doyle, with Armed Conflict Location & Event Data, a group that tracks civil unrest and wars. The large total does not include potential lawsuits, Mejia noted.
Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Judge Orders Trump to Release Mahmoud Khalil
After nearly three months in immigration detention, a federal judge has ruled that President Donald Trump's administration must release pro-Palestinian activist Mahmoud Khalil. The graduate of Columbia University — who was stripped of his permanent residence and arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in March — has been held without criminal charges at the LaSalle Detention Center in Jena, Louisiana. In an order issued Friday, Judge Michael Farbiarz determined that Khalil must be granted bail, and that there was merit to accusations that the Trump administration unlawfully targeted the activist over his political beliefs. 'There is at least something to the underlying claim that there is an effort to use the immigration charge here to punish Mr. Khalil,' Farbiarz said. 'And of course that would be unconstitutional.' The judge added that there was a 'very strong and uncontested record' indicating that Khalil was not a flight risk, and that he would thus 'exercise the discretion that I have to order the release of the petitioner in this case.' Khalil's arrest became an emblematic marker ofTrump's efforts to both punish political speech and target both lawful and undocumented migrants. Khalil was one of a slew of pro-Palestinian organizers and activists who were stripped of their lawful immigration status in retaliation for their activism — some of whom were summarily deported. The justification for the efforts to deport Khalil and the other activists was simply that Secretary of State Marco Rubio decided their continued presence in America 'would have potentially serious adverse foreign policy consequences for the United States.' 'After more than three months we can finally breathe a sigh of relief and know that Mahmoud is on his way home to me and Deen, who never should have been separated from his father,' Khalil's wife Noor Abdalla said in a statement. She gave birth to the couple's first child while Khalil was imprisoned. 'We know this ruling does not begin to address the injustices the Trump administration has brought upon our family, and so many others the government is trying to silence for speaking out against Israel's ongoing genocide against Palestinians,' she added. 'But today we are celebrating Mahmoud coming back to New York to be reunited with our little family, and the community that has supported us since the day he was unjustly taken for speaking out for Palestinian freedom.' More from Rolling Stone GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley Defends Wind Energy After Trump Calls It 'Junk' Trump Announces U.S. Dropped 'Payload of Bombs' on Iran via Truth Social Mahmoud Khalil Says He'll 'Continue to Protest' Following ICE Detention Release Best of Rolling Stone The Useful Idiots New Guide to the Most Stoned Moments of the 2020 Presidential Campaign Anatomy of a Fake News Scandal The Radical Crusade of Mike Pence