It took two Commerce police officers and four Jackson County deputies to subdue a 27-year-old woman at Heritage Hills Apartments last week.
Stacie Marie Williamson, 208 Heritage Hills Drive, Commerce, was charged with criminal trespass, disorderly conduct and obstruction of officers.
The officer who made the report said she was dispatched to an apartment, where the resident couple told them that Williamson was drunk and they wanted her out. The officer found her “very agitated,” and said Williamson cursed her, threatened to call sheriff Stan Evans about her, then relented because she apparently thought the officer was a Banks County officer, the report said.
Officers asked her to go outside. She went outside, shut the door behind her and attempted to flee up the apartment stairs, according to the report. The two officers caught her “and she resisted all the way, losing her pants in the process of resisting us,” the officer wrote. The officer also said Williamson kicked her (the reporting officer) in the head and shoulder, at which time the officers took her to the floor. At that point, they noted that Williamson had a cut on her head.
The first two deputies arrived. Williamson continued to scream, wriggle and tried to bite officers, meanwhile calling them vile names. The deputies called for a leg restraint.
Two more deputies arrived and helped put her in the police car. The report indicated that one of the deputies had used a Taser to subdue her.
The victim of the dispute, a 29-year-old white male, reluctantly admitted that Williamson had struck him in the mouth, the report said. The couple in whose apartment police found Williamson told police Williamson and her boyfriend came over to the apartment, both having been drinking, and began arguing.
The officer reported that all the way to the Jackson County Jail Williamson continued to hurl obscenities, kick at the vehicle’s windows and bang her head. At the jail, about 15 staff formed a welcoming committee, got her into a protective “wrap,” that includes a helmet, and lodged her in a padded cell, the report said.
Commerce police called the Department of Family & Children Services to take charge of Williamson’s three small children, who had been left in another apartment.