Shyheim Adams, 18, has been charged with first-degree manslaughter for the death of his classmate Justin Brady

The arraignment of a Connecticut teen accused of murdering a classmate turned chaotic when the suspect collapsed in court and family and friends of both teens got into a massive brawl.

Shyheim Adams, 18, made his first court appearance in Enfield on Tuesday on charges of manslaughter in the first degree in connection to the stabbing death of 16-year-old Justin Brady.

During the hearing, family members and friends of Brady shouted obscenities at Adams as the teen trembled and cried. Marshals were forced to remove several people from the courtroom so the arraignment could proceed, The Hartford Courant reports.

Video shows an emotional Adams wavering at one point during the hearing and then collapsing to the ground. According to the outlet, Adams said: 'I'm a good soul, Jesus please' and blocked his face with his hands.

WTNH reports that Adams appeared to mumble prayers before he fainted.

As marshals helped Adams up, people in the courtroom continued to scream at him.

Adams collapsed during his arraignment on Tuesday as family and friends of the victim screamed at him

'I'm a good soul, Jesus please', local media outlets reported hearing Adams say as he fainted and fell to the ground

He sat on the floor and was attended to by a court marshal after his collapse

He was surrounded by court marshals as they look towards the screaming coming from some of the people in the court

Judge Sheila Prats halted the arraignment and cleared the courtroom. The Courant reports that yelling and screaming continued in the hallway before spilling outside in the parking lot, where several people got into a massive fist fight.

Enfield police were called to the scene and arrested 30-year-old John Moran for disorderly conduct and third-degree assault. Moran told NBC Connecticut following his release that he was at the arraignment to support his friend Adams.

'He's a good kid,' he said. 'There's facts that haven't been stated to the public, but I think that everyone is innocent until proven guilty. I was there to support my friend and I was attacked for it.'

Ten people had to be kicked out of the courtroom on Tuesday before the hearing could resume. Once things calmed down, a bail commissioner recommended Judge Prats reduce Adams' $1million bond to $500,000.

Prosecutors argued that given how 'disturbing' the allegations are the bond should remain the same.

Nearly 10 people had to be kicked out of the courtroom for yelling at Adams. Outside a massive fight broke out involving friends of both teens

Several people were seen crying and hugging outside the courtroom after police broke up the fight

John Moran (pictured) was arrested on disorderly conduct. He said he was at the arraignment to support Adams

Senior Assistant public defender Ann Guillet told Prats that Adams' family wanted the bond reduced to $50,000. She argued that the teen had no past criminal record and had been the victim of an alleged assault that resulted in him being hospitalized.

Guillet also said Adams had been bullied so bad at Enfield High School, where Brady also attended, that he was forced to leave the school. Prats settled on a new bond of $750,000 and transferred the case to Superior Court in Hartford, which handles more serious crimes.

As Guillet spoke on Adams behalf, the teen sat in a chair shaking and crying, the Courant reports. As marshals led him out of the courtroom he told his family: 'I love you. I promise I'm not a bad person'.

Police were called to a home on Hoover Lane in Enfield early Monday morning for a 'disorderly in progress' call. An arrest warrant affidavit states that Brady had been stabbed multiple times and his white shirt was almost completely covered in blood.

The teen was still breathing when police arrived, but died around 1.30am on Monday.

Brady, 16, was stabbed to death outside a home in Enfield on Monday morning after getting into a fight with Adams

The fight happened outside 15 Hoover Lane in Enfield. The home (pictured) is owned by the town's assistant town attorney Mark Cerrato

According to local media, the son of Cerrato was hanging out with Adams before the stabbing. Pictured above is assistant town attorney Mark Cerrato

Records show that Brady and Adams had been arguing over Snapchat on Sunday night before meeting up outside 15 Hoover Lane to fight. Records show that the home belongs to Enfield assistant town attorney Mark Cerrato, the Courant reports.

Neither teen lives at the home. Fox 61 reports that Cerrato's son Michael was reportedly hanging out with Adams. Cerrato has not yet returned DailyMail.com's request for comment.

Witnesses reported that when Brady arrived to the home he and Adams were standing in the street yelling at each other. Things quickly turned physical and the witness told police he saw Adams repeatedly stab Brady.

Once on the ground, Adams allegedly continued to stab Brady before running into the town attorney's home.

According to the affidavit, items like 'clothing with blood-like stains, cellular telephone and two knives' were found inside the home. One of the knives was located between the box spring and mattress in a bedroom.

Adams is due back in court on September 24.