Jorge Luis Borges
Chaos erupted on a Worcester street Thursday when federal immigration agents apprehended and transferred a woman into an unmarked car as two other women, one of whom flailed at the car in distress, were arrested by Worcester police amid a large and unruly protest.
Dozens of local officers responded to the scene after receiving reports that a hostile crowd of protesters had surrounded a federal agent. One of the women arrested, a juvenile who is believed by witnesses to be the detained woman’s daughter, was forcibly taken into custody after standing with a newborn in front of the car.
The other woman arrested was School Committee candidate Ashley Spring, 38, whom police said had pushed multiple officers as they attempted to arrest the juvenile. Spring allegedly also threw an unknown liquid substance on them, police said.
The altercation is the latest flashpoint in the aggressive federal crackdown to detain and deport unauthorized immigrants, including the controversial detention in March of Tufts University graduate student Rümeysa Öztürk near her Somerville apartment.
“I was horrified and overwhelmed, watching her be torn away and listening to her screaming,” said David Webb, a Worcester man who said he watched the juvenile be arrested. “I was kind of frozen in place, unable to do anything about it.”
Worcester police said they asked the juvenile, who was holding the newborn, to move away from the car because she was endangering the child.
“Eventually, she complied and gave the newborn to someone else,” Worcester police said in a statement. “As the vehicle moved away, she ran after the vehicle and kicked the passenger’s side of it. It appeared that she was going to run in front of the moving vehicle, and officers took her into custody.”
The infant was not injured, police said.
Earlier, according to Webb, he had seen four or five federal officers standing in a semicircle around a vehicle on Eureka Street at about 11 a.m. One woman was in the vehicle’s passenger seat, another was standing outside the vehicle, and they were passing a baby between them, he said.
The officers “were wearing tactical gear that labeled them” either as agents from Immigration and Customs Enforcement or the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Webb said. Plainclothes officers also were on the scene, he said, including one with handcuffs and a weapon visible under his T-shirt.
Attempts to reach the Department of Homeland Security for comment were unsuccessful. Worcester officials said earlier this year that they would not partner with ICE operations and that police would not make arrests because of immigration status.
As the number of onlookers and residents grew, Webb said, about 30 to 40 Worcester police officers arrived as the crowd became more agitated, demanding to know if the agents had a warrant and breaking into a prayer of protection for the family.
Protesters pressed close to police and agents during the confrontation, many holding phones aloft to record the scene. As the distraught woman approaching the unmarked SUV was being subdued, one video showed, police adamantly ordered onlookers to back off. Swarms of police and protesters moved back and forth in clusters across the street, with some residents rushing to the latest flare-up.
A woman who posted several videos of the altercation added a scathing critique of the incident.
“Is this what you support?” she asked in the post. “A mom being separated from her baby? In our own neighborhood? This saddens me so much to have witnessed this!”
Another video posted by the woman shows what appears to be Worcester police forcibly pulling the distraught woman away from the SUV. The vehicle moved slowly, and officers were directing traffic and clearing the street so the car could leave.
Worcester police said they also had received a call “that ICE officers were on scene and refusing to show a warrant to the crowd. Worcester Police officers responded to preserve the peace and prevent anyone from being injured.”
When officers arrived, authorities said, “They observed a chaotic scene with several federal agents from various agencies attempting to take a female into custody. Federal agents had placed this female under arrest and were attempting to leave in a vehicle.”
“The crowd was unruly, and several people were putting their hands on federal agents and Worcester officers in an attempt to keep the vehicle and the arrestee from leaving. Worcester officers attempted to de-escalate the situation and keep everyone safe,” police added.
Webb said tensions escalated after Worcester police responded.
“They immediately tried to take control of the scene that another agency had lost control over,” Webb said. “They were quite aggressive and immediately tried to arrest people.”
Online videos and photographs show many marked and unmarked law-enforcement vehicles lining the street, which Webb said police had blocked to prevent the protest from becoming larger.
Worcester officers “100 percent did support ICE and protected ICE,” Webb said. In addition to arresting the woman who approached the van, he said, “They escorted ICE off the street and through the protesters.”
The juvenile has been charged with reckless endangerment of a child, disturbing the peace, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest, police said.
Spring was charged with assault and battery on a police officer, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon, disorderly conduct, and interfering with a police officer, authorities said.
“This chaotic incident is still under investigation,” police said. “Video is being reviewed and further charges might be forthcoming.”
Emily Spatz contributed to this report.
Brian MacQuarrie can be reached at brian.macquarrie@globe.com.