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NEWS & LETTERS, August-September 2002

Chicago police home invasion nightmare

Chicago--My granddaughter and I were in an argument in my home on Feb. 16. She was really agitated. She was on punishment because she had missed school, and I wouldn’t allow her to leave the house. I am 54 years old, I have asthma and other health problems. I just wanted some help in getting my granddaughter to calm down, so I called the police. My daughter was also at the house with her four little boys.

My granddaughter had gone up to her room and closed the door when the police arrived. When they opened her door they claimed that she had something in her hand. When I entered her room Officer Mendoza was sitting on her legs on the bed, and another officer was sitting on her chest. She wasn’t trying to kick or anything.

I told the officers, “Let her sit up. She can’t breathe.” Mendoza said, “She can breathe, she’s talking.” Officer Conroy busted into the house and grabbed me and pushed me out of the room. We were facing each other so I was being pushed backwards. The way he was pushing, with my asthma, I couldn’t catch my breath. It was terrifying. He pushed me into the living room where my daughter and babies were.

Mendoza and the others were carrying my granddaughter downstairs. She only had a short dress on, you could see underneath. It was winter but she had no shoes. They didn’t give her a chance to put her shoes on. Mendoza struck her on the side of her head. There were six or seven police officers there, men and women, but they didn’t do anything to stop him. When I was shoved in another room by myself, one Black woman officer came in and said, “Be quiet, be quiet. I see what is happening here.” This same officer told the others to let my daughter get my granddaughter her shoes. But she wouldn’t stand up for us in front of the others.

An officer told me, “Get your coat! You’re going to jail!” My neighbor had heard all the noise and came over. She called the police and said, “Send a sergeant down here. These police are out of control.” Sergeant Mulray arrived and asked, “What do you want me to do?” He didn’t do anything but tell me that I was obstructing justice.

At the police station, the officers tried to claim that my granddaughter had struck one of them in the face. I could hear Mendoza trying to agitate my granddaughter. Conroy and his buddies were just walking around laughing. They said, “If you make a complaint we’re going to put your granddaughter in jail for hitting a police officer.” Mendoza was trying to get one officer to say that he was hurt by my granddaughter.

They let me upstairs at the station when the youth officer came. She said the charges against us would be dropped if we’d drop the charges against Officer Conroy. They tore up the complaint against us. My granddaughter was told that she would have to go to a CAPS program. The youth officer told her that she could have been shot for striking an officer. She tried to scare her.

We have complained to the Office of Professional Standards, but they haven’t gotten in touch with us. How could the police just be allowed to come into my home and terrorize us like that? We were all women and children. What about my grandchildren seeing something like that? How do you tell them to call the police when they need help? 

--Gloria Lewis

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