This one starts like every messy relationship story ever… and then turns into a full-on police operation with seven kids, a runaway girlfriend, and a believable-but-maybe-not boyfriend story.
The bodycam footage opens with an officer asking, “What’s going on?” and instantly getting dragged into chaos.
The woman on scene says she brought her boyfriend to his ex’s house because he “just wants to see his kids.” According to her, the boyfriend has been trying to get away from his wife for weeks, the wife is “not stable,” and the whole thing has been going on for “over a year now.”
She says she waited around the corner in her car so there wouldn’t be drama. There was drama anyway.
She tells police the wife allegedly jumped in her own car, hunted her down, yanked open her door, and then straight up attacked her inside her vehicle at 4 a.m. — punching her in the face, trying to grab her, even allegedly going for her stomach because “she thinks I’m pregnant… she wants to kill the baby if I am.” The woman says she was trapped in her seatbelt, screaming for help, hyperventilating, and just trying to get this person off her.
She claims a neighbor had to physically pull the woman away while yelling “Get off of her!” before things finally stopped.
But that’s only round one.
Police then head to the house — where the boyfriend is supposedly inside with the other woman and multiple kids — and it gets even sketchier. The man at the door keeps changing his story.
“Is Kiara here?” officers ask.
“No, she left with a friend.”
Seconds later:
“We know she’s in there.”
There are reportedly seven kids in the home. One is hers. Six are his. Officers are clearly worried about things popping off in front of the kids, and they warn him: this can go easy, or this can go bad.
Then comes the moment: “You’re hiding her. You’re harboring someone.”
At that point, he gives in — “Alright, fine” — and agrees to bring her out rather than let officers go inside and drag her out.
While that’s happening, officers detain him, explain he’s “not under arrest yet,” and start reading Miranda. They’re calm. He’s nervous. He keeps saying he just wants to see his kids. She keeps saying the other woman is unstable and manipulative. Everyone says they’re the victim.
This is not just relationship drama. This is:
- custody fight
- possible assault investigation
- possible interference with police
- kids in the middle at 4 in the morning
And it’s all playing out in real time on camera.
The last thing you hear before questioning continues?
“Having these rights in mind, do you wish to talk to us now?”
Yeah. This one is way deeper than “my ex is crazy.” This is what it looks like when domestic beef, custody wars, and criminal charges all collide on one driveway.