This dispatch by Bill Shaner, an independent journalist who writes the Worcester Sucks and I Love It newsletter, was first published by Luke OâNeilâs Welcome to Hell World.
Iâm driving five miles across the city to check out a tip that thereâs an ICE rendition ongoing. Iâve got the scanner on the car stereo as Iâm about to pull onto the street in question. Itâs a quiet neighborhood, small houses on small lots, people walking dogs, the mailman waving, the lawnmowers running, and I hear the dispatcher: âWe have an ICE officer over there whoâs allegedly being surrounded.â
âOn our way,â the officer responds.
As a local reporter for a decade now, Iâve learned that you can hear the cops at their most honest on the scanner. And as Iâm hearing that âsurroundedâ comment I remember what the cityâs police chief told the city council in January:
âWe do not do civil detention arrests,â Police Chief Paul Saucier said at the time, reassuring them that they wouldnât be party to the ICE assault Trump was about to unleash. The police, he said, âdo not have the authority to affect a civil arrest.â
What he didnât say is that if you try to stop the civil arrest, the police will stop you from stopping it.
This morning a few dozen of us here in Worcester, Massachusetts, got to see that unstated fine print in action firsthand. A woman was led by federal agents in cuffs away from her family, through a throng of community organizers trying to stop it, and into an unmarked car. The local police arrived to prevent the community from protecting their neighbor from an unlawful kidnapping. They succeeded, and in the process arrested two of the people who tried to stop it.
I park my car on the edge of the scene and all I can hear are the screamsâthe deafening desperate screams, from a mother, from her daughter, from the woman holding the daughterâs baby. Wordless screams.
And then I see the mother, a young woman in a green shirt, wailing, crying, held on either side by menacing white men in tactical vests, black neck warmers pulled over their noses in the style du jour for our secret police forces.
Surrounding them are a few dozen community members who were tipped off about the ICE raid and got to it before the police did. Before I arrived, they demanded to see a warrant. The ICE agents refused to provide one, so they created a human chain, which the ICE officers eventually broke through.
I still donât know her name or where theyâve taken her. The federal officials provided no information to anyone at the scene. But apparently they called the local police for backup. They felt that they were surrounded. Black Hawk Down.
New video shows close-up view of ICE agents slamming the young womanâs face into the ground during arrest in neighborhood raid.âI donât have anyone at home. They arrested my mom, my sister, and a 2-month-old baby,â a family member cries out. pic.twitter.com/9vcxEICW5Y
â (@LongTimeHistory) May 9, 2025
As theyâre marching this woman to the back door of the tan unmarked Ford SUV representing her nebulous fate, the community is swarming, surrounding, yelling at the ICE officers. City Councilor Etel Haxhiaj, a dear friend and a relentless advocate for her community, is following closest behind them. Sheâs screaming. âYou are cowards.â Sheâs jogging to keep pace as they march their jackbooted march to the SUV with New York plates. âThis is an innocent woman.â
An ICE agent opens the door and the womanâs daughter shrieksâan unforgettable noise of agony. Her mother is about to disappear, into the purposefully vague bureaucratic world of forced removal. The opening of that door, to this shrieking girlâŠit must look like a life torn apart. Her family fractured. And for what? No one bothers to explain that to her. Perhaps theyâre not allowed to.
The Worcester Police Department steps in at this crucial juncture, among us residents surrounding the car about to take one of our neighbors away. And they do so on behalf of the ICE agents, not us. A Worcester cop comes over, stepping between the open car door and the community, past the ICE agents stuffing the mother into the back seat, and he looks at a woman holding the shrieking daughterâs baby. Sheâs also wailing in desperate anger and he saysâto herââStop, stop, stop. Theyâll explain. Theyâll explain.â
Of course they donât explain.
The womanâs daughter then jumps on the hood of the car. A Worcester cop pulls her off.
The crowd chants, âDonât take the mother!â over and over again as the daughter keeps trying to get back on the hood of the car. More Worcester cops arrive, all helping the ICE agents carry out their rotten senseless work.
The deporteeâs daughter, a 16-year-old whose name has not been disclosed, held to the ground and cuffed by Worcester police officers. (Bill Shaner)
When I say ICE, itâs a catchall. These federal agents were wearing a myriad of badges and few of them had name tags. Most of them had âPOLICEâ written somewhere on their tactical vests. There were ICE insignias, but also Customs and Border Patrol, and one ATF.
A CBP agent, his face cover falling down slightly below his nose, pushes a woman away from the car in the manner of an offensive tackleâelbows out, knees bent, forearms thrusting. Others take the womanâs place.
The crowd of community members, who these officers ostensibly protect and serve, continues to cheer, âDonât take the mother, donât take the mother.â The daughter is still shrieking.
âThis is ICE. This is federal,â one of the WPD officers explains, as if a suitable explanation. Case closed.
A woman says, âThey donât have a warrant.â Another says, âTheyâre trying to kidnap someone.â
As the local cops are clearing the road for ICEâs unmarked SUV, community organizer Maydee Morales confronts them. âWorcester police are not supposed to be involved in this.â
In the background, a Worcester police officer looks at the desperate woman holding her baby trying to stop the agents from taking her mother and says âDo you want to stay with your baby?â The tacit threat of separation for her protestation of another separation. Later he would complain âSheâs putting the baby in harmâs way.â A classic move: âharmâ goes undefined because the harm is him.
Maydee, still confronting the officers, says, âWhere is the warrant?â Officer Lugo, according to his nameplate, says, âMaâam we are trying our best but they are federal.â
Morales again asks for the warrant.
âTheyâre federal.â
âThey still need a warrant.â
Another officer, frustrated, says, âThey donât need a warrant.â Finally, one of them tells the truth. Due process is not a matter theyâre concerned with. The deportation must proceed. Trying to stop it is the unlawful thing. At this point an ICE agent starts pushing me away, but not very hard. Lazy jabs, his mind elsewhere. Too many people, too much pushing to be done. I return to my pre-push position. I keep filming. I donât know what else to do.
A Worcester police officer stands between the ICE agents and a crowd of community members. (Bill Shaner)
A cop pulls his cruiser behind usâweâre boxed in nowâand from the intercom says âThis is the Worcester Police Department. This is an unlawful assembly, Iâm warning you to disperse right now or you will be subject to arrest.â
On the other side of me, a crackle of the scanner from an officerâs vest-mounted radio: âDo I have a car to escort the marshals out of here?â
They donât need a warrant but they do need an escort.
As the car pulls away, nudging into the thick crowd, the daughter shrieks another horrible horrible horrible shriek, communicating the non-communicable as the disappearers take another step toward disappearing her mother. As the car breaks from the crowd she runs after it. A Worcester police officer, his voice frothing with anger, shouts, âArrest her right now. You are under arrest.â And then four cops swarm her, grab her, throw her to the ground. All the while sheâs crying crying crying. Her hairâs caught in her mouth and matted to her face, wet with spit and tears. Four cops hold her pinned to the ground.
Then they march her away. Her and another member of the community who had tried to intervene. They take the pair away from the crowd. I follow. They have the daughter by both arms, same as the ICE agents had her mother. I still donât know either of their names. Next to me is a TV reporter from a Spanish language station and her cameraman. She yells out, âWhatâs your name?â and the woman responds in Portuguese. I canât make it out. She asks her age and this one I catch: âdezesseis.â
Not a womanâa girl. A 16-year-old girl. Now in custody for the crime of reacting in an unruly way to the sudden forceful disappearance of her mother.
I keep asking about the charges. The only cop who doesnât ignore me explains âIâm not the arresting officer.â The arresting officers go on ignoring me.
We get to the spot where the wagon is set to arrive. I ask again. Eventually I get an answer, and itâs the usual package job: disturbing the peace, disorderly conduct, unlawful assembly. The charges they throw on anyone they want to arrest for the sake of arresting them, knowing theyâre unlikely to stick. But sticking isnât the goal. The officer who tells me this has a tactical K9 Unit vest on. He tells me the 16-year-old girl was interfering with police business. âWorcester police business?â I ask. What was the police business here exactly? He looks at me like Iâm a smart ass. He doesnât say anything. I press him again: âKind of a grey area, huh?â
âNot really,â he says.
Update: In a statement posted to the Worcester Police Departmentâs Facebook page Thursday night, the WPD said they responded to âa report of a federal agent who was surrounded by a large group of about twenty-five people.â The daughter was charged with reckless endangerment of a child, disturbing the peace, disorderly conduct, and resisting arrest. The other community organizer faces charges of assault and battery on a police officer, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon (unknown liquid), disorderly conduct, and interfering with a police officer. Both were out on bail by Thursday night, according to local organizers. The name and whereabouts of the woman taken by ICE remain unknown.
Nobody wants to be violent. But how do you stop a violent oppressor without force? You canât. You can resist, but ultimately, whoever uses more force will win.