DETROIT, MI- Monique Dillard-Bothuell, the stepmother of Charlie Bothuell V, the 12-year-old found barricaded in his father's basement after being missing for 11 days, was reportedly released from jail today.

WDIV-TV reports the 36-year-old woman, wearing a GPS tether, was released around 1:55 p.m. Saturday from the William Dickerson Detention Facility in Hamtramick. The television station reports her husband and the boy's father, Charles IV, picked her up.

Police arrested Dillard-Bothuell on a probation violation Thursday. She has a previous conviction in Wayne County for illegal purchase of a firearm without a permit. The arrest was unrelated to Charlie's disappearance and discovery in the basement of his home.

Investigators have not arrested either Monique or Charlie IV related to the boys disappearance.

Monique Dillard-Bothuell is arraigned for a probation violation at Frank Murphy Hall of Justice in Detroit on Friday, June 27, 2014. Her stepson, Charlie Bothuell V, 12, went missing for a dozen days and was found Wednesday in the multiple-unit condo where father, Charles Bothuell IV, and Dillard-Bothuell, live near downtown Detroit. Dillard-Bothuell was arrested on a probation violation related to a misdemeanor gun charge. Charlie Bothuell V has been turned over to his mother. (AP Photo/Detroit News, Clarence Tabb, Jr)

Child Protective Services on Thursday placed Charlie with his biological mother and removed two of his half-siblings, 4 and 10 months, from the Bothuell's townhouse in Detroit's Lafayette Park, Detroit police officials confirmed.

Charlie, after a widespread search that included K-9 handler and multiple agencies, located the boy in his father's basement, where they'd searched several times prior.

It didn't appear the Charlie was being held captive; he apparently had access to a bathroom, smiled at police when they discovered him and had cereal and soda nearby.

Detroit Police Chief James Craig said the boy was barricaded in a storage area within the basemen near a furnace behind boxes and a large storage drum.

The father has said he thought his son was dead and it's "absurd and wrong" to imply he knew his son was in the basement.

Michael Wayland covers the automotive industry for MLive. Email him at MWayland@mlive.com & follow him on Twitter @MikeWayland or Google+.