ICE Releases Fabian Schmidt, N.H. Green Card Holder in Detention for 2 Months

Fabian Schmidt and his mother, Astrid Senior.
Fabian Schmidt and his mother, Astrid Senior.
Courtesy of Astrid Senior
2 min read
Share
Fabian Schmidt and his mother, Astrid Senior.
Fabian Schmidt and his mother, Astrid Senior.
Courtesy of Astrid Senior
ICE Releases Fabian Schmidt, N.H. Green Card Holder in Detention for 2 Months
Copy

Fabian Schmidt, the New Hampshire green card holder detained by federal immigration authorities, has been released from detention after nearly two months in federal custody.

His mother Astrid Senior confirmed he was released late Thursday night and declined an interview.

“FABIAN IS FREE and HOME!!!!,” his partner Bhavani Hodgkins posted on Facebook. The account wrote the post was also from Fabian himself, asking for patience and privacy.

“We are OVERWHELMED with love!” Hodgkins posted a video of Schmidt smiling and reuniting with his dog.

His attorney, David Keller, didn’t return a request for comment. Federal immigration enforcement agencies did not immediately return requests for comment, but a detainee lookup portal no longer shows Schmidt in custody.

Schmidt, originally from Germany, was detained at Donald W. Wyatt detention facility in Central Falls, Rhode Island.

He had recently renewed his green card and had no active issues in court.

Schmidt had been visiting Luxembourg and flew back to the United States in March. Hodgkins had gone to pick him up at Logan Airport and waited four hours before calling authorities.

Shortly after his arrest, his mother described Schmidt being “violently interrogated” at Logan Airport for hours — being stripped naked, put in a cold shower by two officials and being put back onto a chair.

She said Schmidt told her immigration agents pressured him to give up his green card. She said he was placed on a mat in a bright room with other people at the airport, with little food or water, suffered sleep deprivation and was denied access to his medication for anxiety and depression.

“He hardly got anything to drink. And then he wasn’t feeling very well and he collapsed,” Senior said at the time.

He was transported by ambulance to Mass General Hospital and was treated for the flu.

Schmidt and his mother moved to the United States in 2007 and received green cards in 2008. He moved from California to New Hampshire in 2022.

Senior described her son as a hardworking electrical engineer with a partner and daughter who are both U.S. citizens.

Schmidt had a misdemeanor charge for having marijuana in his car in 2015, which his mother said was dismissed after laws changed in California around marijuana possession. She says he missed a hearing about the case in 2022 since a notice was never forwarded to his new address.

In March, Customs and Border Protection denied the allegations, calling them “blatantly false with respect to CBP.”

“When an individual is found with drug-related charges and tries to reenter the country, officers will take proper action,” wrote Hilton Beckham, the agency’s Assistant Commissioner for Public Affairs, then. The agency didn’t respond to further questions at the time about the specific claims they dispute.

Copyright 2025 WGBH Radio

This story was originally published by GBH. It was shared as part of the New England News Collaborative.

In the midst of a growing mental health crisis among young people, Rhode Island PBS and The Public’s Radio launch a week-long project highlighting resilience, community support, and youth-led solutions
Clinical psychologist Jacqueline Nesi helps parents navigate social media in her Substack, “Techno Sapiens”
The president and CEO of The Public’s Radio and Rhode Island PBS said she is “very concerned.”
With pizza, mentorship, and a mic, Roberto Gonzalez and his student-led program give youth a voice—turning curiosity into confidence and classrooms into launchpads for global storytelling
The state senator who represents Providence says the city should explore new ways to raise revenue
Speaker Shekarchi calls the effort important for retaining the company
Former Senate president died with $148K cash on hand as of March 31
In an executive order, President Trump directs the Corporation for Public Broadcasting to stop funding NPR and PBS. They say he can’t. PBS chief Paula Kerger calls it “blatantly unlawful”.
The payment resolves a federal lawsuit against former patrolman Michael Pessoa, who was convicted in 2023 of punching a handcuffed suspect in the face and filing false reports to cover up the incident
Rhode Island celebrates the arrival of spring with the tradition of May Breakfasts. The oldest, at Cranston’s Oaklawn Community Baptist Church, has been going strong for 156 years