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The police from Worcester holds teen girl down during ice operations – NBC Boston

The police of Worcester and the US immigration and customs authorities were seen on video that held a mother and her daughter of teenage, whose face was hit in the city in the city of Massachusetts on Thursday.

Telemundo Nueva Inglaterra has recorded a video of the chaotic scene on Eureka Terrace. It shows a large amount that forms around the agents and officers as a community members call: “You shouldn't work with ice cream!”

A person who was identified as a 16-year-old girl briefly escaped from the police officers of Worcester, who are then seen how she chased her desperately and holds back on the floor.

“The series of events was undoubtedly worrying and the film material of a separate family is shocking,” said City Manager Eric Batista in an explanation. “After several emergency rooms, the Worcester police were sent to support on site. Unfortunately, after several attempts by WPD officials, two people were arrested to decal the chaotic situation, which included the risk of a child.”

Mobile phone video shows the moment when two workers were recorded when ICE finds that it will be a further increase in raids in the Boston region.

The girl, her mother, another relative and a newborn baby wanted to get into a vehicle when she was intercepted by ice agents.

The mother was also arrested. Ice was waiting for her when the Brazilian natives left her home.

“I don't have anyone at home. You arrested my mother, my sister and a 2 month old baby,” said a family member to Telemundo Nueva Inglaterra in Spanish.

The Worcester police said they replied to a report at 11.13 a.m. that a group of 25 people had surrounded a federal agent in Eureka Street.

“When officials arrived on site, they watched a chaotic scene with several federal agents of various agencies who tried to take a woman in custody,” said the department in a press release. “Federal agents had arrested this woman and tried to go in a vehicle. The crowd was unruly, and several people put their hands on federal agents and Worcester officers in order to prevent the vehicle and the arrest from it. The officials of Worcester tried to deescale the situation and keep them all securely.”

The Worcester police told the person who holds the newborn baby, a youthful, was announced that they endanger the child. After giving the baby to someone else, she ran after an officer's vehicle and stepped. Due to ruthless threat to a child, she was taken into custody, peace, disordered behavior and resistance to arrest.

Another woman, the 28-year-old Ashley Spring by Worcester, was also arrested by the local police after he had supposedly thrown “an unknown liquid substance” on civil servants. The police from Worcester said that she is charged with a police officer, a bodily harm and a battery with a dangerous weapon, disordered behavior and a police officer.

The police did not provide any information about ice operation. It was not immediately clear how many people were in federal custody.

“We asked the ICE agents to let them go into the bathroom, and they told me no that she was waiting for her lawyer,” said activist Maydee Morales, who was present in the incident, in Spanish.

When federal agents refused, they decided to name a lawyer for immigration lawyers.

“When we talked to her, she told us when she hadn't been arrested and there was no arrest warrant, she could go to the toilet, and then they started pulling her in her hand with the baby,” she said.

The neighbors alerted the Worcester police to search for support, but their commitment outraged the community.

“The police arrived, and instead of keeping peace as we did, they disrupted the entire situation,” said Morales.

“The call was due to a disturbance that implements an enemy crowd around a federal agent.

The incident is the latest ice operation in Massachusetts to let the members of the community fear. A 25-year-old man from Guatemaltean without a previous police or criminal register was arrested at a petrol station in Framingham on Monday, his family said.

Read the complete statement by City Manager Eric Batista:

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