Wrong Apartment
NYPD goes
into wrong apartment, drags naked grandmother out of her home, pepper spray
4-year-old & arrest 12-year-old
August 2, 2014
A Brooklyn grandmother who had
just taken a shower was dragged from her apartment by about 12 cops who then
stood by for more than two minutes while she was naked in the hallway,
according to video that emerged Friday.
Denise Stewart was in her
Brownsville apartment on July 13 when police — responding to a domestic
disturbance call at the building — pounded on her door at 11:45 p.m. and
demanded entry.
Stewart, 48, cracked the door
wearing only a towel wrapped around her body and underpants — and was yanked
into the hallway by cops over the screams of her family and neighbors.
The video shows a chaotic scene
as a dozen or so male officers burst into Stewart’s apartment, while several
others struggle to subdue and cuff the nearly naked woman in the hallway
outside.
Stewart’s towel got lost in the
scuffle, leaving the grandmother dressed only in underpants.
“Oxygen, get my oxygen,” the mother
of four can be heard saying to the cops, as they propped her bare body against
the wall.
A cop shouts, “OK, OK,” and
darts out of the screen.
Neighbors videotaping from the
stairwell started shouting as Stewart, who has severe asthma, fainted and fell
to the floor.
“Yo, her mother got asthma
…y’all wicked, y’all f——— wicked,” shouted one woman.
“Her asthma! Her asthma! Her
asthma,” screamed another woman. For approximately two minutes and 20 seconds,
Stewart was bare-breasted in the hallway as additional police officers tramped
up the stairs and through the hallway, glancing at her as they passed by.
When cops hauled Stewart’s two
sons and two daughters out of the apartment and cuffed them, a female cop
finally draped a white towel over Stewart’s exposed torso.
Reached at her home Friday,
Stewart told the Daily News she was traumatized. “It’s disgusting and
embarrassing. I’ve been married 16 years. It took my husband 10 years to see my
nakedness,” she said. “I didn’t do nothing wrong,” she said, crying as she
recounted the ordeal.
The NYPD said they’d gotten a
911 call to the Kings Highway address but didn’t have an apartment number. They
heard shouts coming from Stewart’s apartment. When they knocked, she told them
they had the wrong place and tried to shut the door, police said.
Stewart’s 12-year-old daughter
had “visible injuries” to her face, cops said. She told officers her mother and
older sister beat her with a belt, police said.
Family members tried to prevent
them from arresting Stewart, who bit an officer’s finger during the struggle,
police said.
Stewart’s lawyer, Amy Rameau,
said she was told by a Legal Aid attorney also assigned to the case that the
911 call came from a different apartment on an upper floor — and cops went to
Stewart’s door by mistake.
Cops removed the 12-year-old
from the apartment and say she refused to get into the police car and kicked
the door.
A police spokesman said the
child kicked out one of the police van’s windows, with the broken glass cutting
the chin of one of the cops. The cops were treated at local hospitals and
released.
Denise Stewart was charged with
assaulting a police officer, and — along with her oldest daughter, Diamond
Stewart, 20, — resisting arrest, acting in a manner injurious to a child and
criminal possession of a weapon.
Stewart’s son Kirkland Stewart,
24, was charged with resisting arrest. The 12-year-old was charged with
assaulting a police officer, criminal mischief and criminal possession of a
weapon.
Diamond Stewart’s 4-year-old
son was also pepper sprayed, the family said.
“They manhandled (Stewart) and
behaved in a deplorable manner,” Rameau said. “She feels completely mortified.
This is about human dignity.”
The city’s Administration for
Children’s Services was called to investigate but didn’t find any evidence of
neglect, said Rameau.
“There were no injuries to the
child as alleged in the complaint,” the lawyer said.
A police spokesman said the
incident is under investigation by Internal Affairs.
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