The alleged victim has her own history with alcohol abuse, and Schweizer once obtained a restraining order against her several years ago, Palazzo said. Most telling in the restraining order is that the alleged victim indicated if he slept in the living room, she would call the police and falsely accuse him of rape, Palazzo said. So she already has the basis to make a false accusation.
Palazzo said the woman declined to give police a written statement at the scene of the alleged rape on April 21. When she was brought to the local hospital, she was so intoxicated she declined medical treatment and threw bodily fluids at the staff, he said.
New Jersey Herald
The Bergen County woman said she thought her troubles had ended last May when she took refuge in her car after an altercation at her then-boyfriend s home in Vernon.
But as she settled into her vehicle for the night, she heard a knock on the window, she said in a lawsuit filed last week in Sussex County.
The knock was allegedly a prelude to a sexual assault by a Vernon Township police officer, Emanuel Rivera, who now faces criminal charges over the May 2020 incident. In the suit filed in state Superior Court, his alleged victim says the encounter has left her with lasting emotional trauma.
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Is it? Could it be…
light?
Make no mistake, we are still waist-deep in the COVID swamp. Most of the country still has not been vaccinated. More than 2,000 Americans a day are still dying of the virus. And for the time being, we still have to wear masks or better yet, double-masks keep our distance, avoid gatherings and keep to our own homes as much as possible.
But vaccines are out there. More vaccines are coming. The rate of new U.S. infections is declining: from a peak of 248,321 on Jan. 6 to 54,950 on Feb. 22, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Is it? Could it be…
light?
Make no mistake, we are still waist-deep in the COVID fever swamp. Most of the country still has not been vaccinated. More than 2,000 Americans a day are still dying of the virus. For the next half-year at least, we re still going to have to mask or better yet, double-mask keep our distance, avoid gatherings, keep to our own homes as much as possible.
But vaccines are out there. More vaccines are coming. The rate of new U.S. infections is declining: from a peak of 248,321 on Jan. 6 to 54,950 on Feb. 22, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. By the winter holidays if the fates allow we could be very nearly back to what we call normal.