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Tucson high school students protest classmate's possible deportation

Thomas Torres, 18, has a court date on May 22, the same day he is supposed to graduate from Desert View High School.

PHOENIX — About 120 high school students in southern Arizona protested Monday to demand the release of their classmate, who they say is being held for possible deportation following a traffic stop.

Thomas Torres, a senior about to graduate from Desert View High School in Tucson, was taken into custody Thursday by sheriff's deputies and turned over to Border Patrol, said Victor Mercado, a spokesman for the Sunnyside Unified High School District.

Border Patrol and Pima County sheriff's officials did not immediately answer requests for information and comment.

Mercado said Torres, 18, has a court date on May 22, the same day he is supposed to graduate.

"Thomas is the American Dream," said one of the many homemade signs carried by the students protesting outside the sheriff's office. Other signs read, "Abolish the Border Patrol" and "Without Justice, There is No Peace."

Lorena Rodriguez, a family friend who launched a GoFundMe page to raise money for Torres' legal costs, said the boy was a toddler when his relatives moved from Mexico to the U.S. "to seek a better future."

Rodriguez said Torres' family had long since returned to Mexico and he had been living with her family as a close friend of her brother, who also is scheduled to graduate.

She said Torres called the family from a detention facility in Casa Grande. He told them he was driving when he was stopped by sheriff's deputies for going slightly over the speed limit but was unable to produce a driver's license.

Arizona does not issue licenses to people who are in the county without authorization.

Rodriguez said Torres and her brother had already picked up their graduation robes, which are hanging in the bedroom they share.

Torres attended Desert View High School for the past four years, where he was involved in school and sports activities, said Rodriguez. She said he also worked busing tables at a local restaurant, as well as doing yard work and other side jobs.

"People like Thomas are needed in this country," Rodriguez wrote on the fundraising site. "He's a hardworking young man willing to better his future."

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