The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Cop cruiser hits man fleeing ICE

Boughton backs ICE agents

- By Dirk Perrefort and Rob Ryser rryser@newstimes.com 203-731-3342

DANBURY — Samuel Cruz didn’t expect to find immigratio­n agents waiting for him at Danbury Superior Court on Friday, where the 25-year-old was due to be sentenced on a domestic assault charge.

So he ran — straight into White Street traffic — and was knocked to the ground by an unmarked police car.

Cruz jumped up and tried to run again, but he was surrounded, handcuffed and strapped to a stretcher.

“I can’t believe that he even stood up,” said eyewitness John Frank, looking at the smashed windshield of the police car. “He must have had a lot of adrenaline running through his system.”

An ambulance took Cruz to Danbury Hospital, but his injuries were minor, police said.

It may seem like a dramatic way to start the work day in small city America, but incidents like this are becoming more common under President Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigratio­n, even if Danbury is two times zones away from the center of the debate on the southern border.

Last spring, for example, ICE agents arrested two men in separate incidents outside the same courthouse in downtown Danbury – a man accused of drugging and raping a 15-year-old girl, and another man accused of defying a federal judge’s order to leave the country in 2013.

Similar incidents have happened across the state in Norwich, Middletown and New London — the apparent result of a 2017 Trump executive order to hire 10,000 ICE agents and a policy to target immigrants in judicial proceeding­s by staking out courthouse­s.

In reaction to Friday’s arrest, longtime Republican Mayor Mark Boughton said agents from U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t acted appropriat­ely.

“The individual was there at the courthouse for a reason, because there was pending legal action against him,” said Boughton, the GOP frontrunne­r for governor in November. “I have no problem with ICE going to court to pick someone up if their focus is on arresting people who have committed crimes.”

Cruz, who was due to be sentenced to two years’ probation, had previously pleaded guilty to misdemeano­r charges of assault and disorderly conduct stemming from a home dispute in February, police said. As part of the plea agreement, prosecutor­s dropped a felony charge of risk of injury to a minor.

“No one wants to see someone injured, but when you run away from federal agents, bad things happen,” Boughton said.

Boughton pledged last year that Danbury would work as a “force multiplier” with ICE agents. At the same time, outgoing Democratic Gov. Dannel P. Malloy was urging Connecticu­t police department­s to defy Trump’s ICE initiative.

Danbury, a city of 85,000, has about 5,000 undocument­ed immigrants, Boughton estimates.

On Friday, Boughton said city police were not aware ICE agents were staking out the courthouse. City police are only responsibl­e for investigat­ing the accident with the police car, which was driven by a Brookfield officer who was dropping off paperwork at the courthouse, city police said.

A top civil rights advocate called Friday morning’s arrest “unconscion­able and unacceptab­le” and accused ICE of “jeopardizi­ng this man’s life” by chasing him into the street.

“Nobody should be in fear of being torn away from their home because they went to a Connecticu­t courthouse,” said Dan Barrett, legal director of the ACLU of Connecticu­t in Hartford. “Judges, lawyers, and anyone who values the rule of law in Connecticu­t and thinks the courts should be open to the people should be really worried about this.”

The ACLU and other civil rights groups have joined attorneys and judges in complaints about courthouse ICE arrests under Trump. Courthouse arrests happened under President Obama as well, but attorneys told the Associated Press in March that the pace appears to have picked up under Trump.

Susan Storey, Connecticu­t’s chief public defender, and other critics of the Trump policy warn that creating a climate of fear at the courthouse could backfire by keeping witnesses and victims from appearing at hearings.

“I have no problem with ICE going to court to pick someone up if their focus is on arresting people who have committed crimes.”

Danbury Mayor Mark Boughton

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States