A man whose wife was arrested by federal immigration authorities on Thursday morning in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, said Friday that his toddler daughter had been “traumatized” by the chaotic altercation during which he appeared to have a seizure and the agents threatened to take both parents away and turn the child over to the state.
Carlos Sebastian Zapata told the Boston Globe that he became unconscious while trying to stop the agents from pulling his wife, Juliana Milena Zapata, away during a traffic stop at about 7 a.m. while Zapata and the couple’s 1 1/2-year-old daughter, Alaia, were taking her to work at Burger King.
Their car was suddenly surrounded by several vehicles and federal agents began banging on their windows.
When Zapata tried to stop the agents from taking his wife away, one officer “pressed on his neck,” according to the Globe, and he lost consciousness while Alaia was in his arms.
As a video taken by an eyewitness showed, Zapata said he “had convulsions or something. I don’t know what they did to me, but they were pressing on my neck.”
The video appeared to show the 24-year-old father having a seizure as Alaia cried, and horrified onlookers yelled at the immigration agents. Local police ordered the bystanders to stay back.
“I wasn’t letting go of my wife because they wanted to take her away,” Zapata told the Globe. When he began having convulsions, he said, “That’s when I let go of my wife.”
He said the agents told the couple that they would either arrest Milena Zapata and allow Alaia to stay with her father, or they would arrest both parents and turn the child over to a state agency.
US Sen. Ed Markey (D-Mass.) called the incident “harrowing” and condemned the masked Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents who had “brutalized” the family, and the Trump administration for its nationwide mass deportation campaign.
“If this video left you feeling scared, I want you to know, so am I,” said Markey. “If you’re feeling angry, so am I... What we saw in this video is just another example of the violence and terror being perpetrated all across our country. This is not normal. This is what dictators do.”
Zapata told the Globe that he and his wife were from Ecuador and entered the country several years ago. They have a pending asylum case and had authorization to work.
Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), said on social media that Milena Zapata was a “violent criminal illegal alien.”
The Globe reported that “according to court records, Milena Zapata was accused of stabbing a woman with scissors in the hand and throwing a trash can at her during a dispute over a relationship she believed the woman had with her husband. She was charged with assault and battery with a dangerous weapon.”
Zapata told the Globe that his wife had been attending all her court dates as ordered and that the situation had been “blown out of proportion.”
“We came here to work, not to cause harm or anything like that,” Zapata said.
DHS accused Zapata of “faking a seizure,” saying he refused medical attention after his wife was arrested.
He told the Globe that Alaia has been distraught since her mother was detained; Milena Zapata is reportedly being held at Cumberland County Jail in Maine.
“She misses her mom a lot, she stays very close to her mom,” Zapata said. “She asks about her mom, she says, ‘Mami, mami, mami’ all the time. I don’t know what to tell her... Sincerely, she is traumatized.”
Community members are planning to hold a vigil in Fitchburg on Saturday, and the mayor’s office has offered assistance to the family. The city has received more than 5,000 calls about ICE’s treatment of the family.
“The violence and cruelty is hard to watch, but impossible for families to endure,” said Rep. Ayanna Pressley (D-Mass.) of the video that circulated on social media Friday. “This is a sickening example of Trump and ICE’s blatant disregard for humanity as they terrorize our families and communities. It is shameful, cruel, and it must end.”