Marjorie Evans was nearly in tears as she watched repo men, police officers and locksmiths converge on her Worcester home Thursday morning.

Constables from housing court arrived at her 158 Orient St. home to evict her. The bank has allegedly tried to remove Evans from the property 10 times in the past two years.

"They violated the appeals court stay that was on my property, and they violated that by going to the Worcester Housing Court that gave them whatever they want," Evans said. "The crookedness doesn't stop and they just build on it."

Several members of the Worcester Anti-Foreclosure Team were at the scene to protest Evan's eviction. WAFT is a grassroots organization of citizens concerned about foreclosure issues in the city.

Tom Sacks, a WAFT member, said the eviction is completely illegal. He claims that bankers from Freddie Mac have been hounding Evans for years, despite them not actually owning the property.

According to the city assessor's office, the property is owned by the Federal Home Loan Corporation, also known as Freddie Mac.

According to land records, Evans was served a foreclosure deed executed by Nationstar Mortgage LLC in 2015. However, members of WAFT questioned the foreclosure, claiming that Evans was unfairly treated in court and a victim of predatory lending.

A foreclosure lawyer at the scene of the eviction could not comment.

"You'll see items submitted online, items submitted by people who claim to own the property, but there's no proof in there that they actually do own the property," Sacks said.

Tension grew as the eviction unfolded.

One protester, 58-year-old Lori Cairns, was arrested for allegedly blocking a constable and locksmith from entering Evan's home. Police say she elbowed and pushed the employee

Evans told reporters that she is awaiting a ruling from the Supreme Judicial Court that is expected to be released Thursday.

The SJC is determining whether Evans will be able to temporarily stay in her home. If the SJC rules against her, she will be forced to leave.

According to a Facebook post on WAFT's member page, Evans journey through bankruptcy and housing court has been a difficult one.

Evans has a "manageable disability" that has been exacerbated by the court process. She had hired a lawyer to represent her in housing court, but the attorney suffered a fatal heart attack a month before her hearing.

She was forced to represent herself and revealed her disability to the court. She was allegedly questioned for 20 minutes about her condition.

"I stood in court and told them, 'There's no way that Freddie Mac bought this property, there's no way Freddie Mac filed those documents, those are all lies.' And yet, the housing court is willing to accept Freddie Mac's word and allow them to destroy me," Evans said.

Members from WAFT said they will announce an update of the SJC's decision when it becomes available.

In the meantime, Evans said she will have a place to stay regardless of the decision.