JaniceM
Well-known Member
- Location
- still lost between two shores..
I've lived all over the U.S., never encountered this before. The overall viewpoint is all unattached/unaccompanied 'females' are 'up for grabs.' One older guy summed it up a few years ago: 'When a girl says 'no,' she really means 'yes,' or she at least means 'maybe'.'
Members of the male gender take this to mean they should 'try harder' or be downright obnoxious; telling some jerk to back off is considered 'playing games,' and if you don't cooperate you're deemed 'crazy.'
During the time I've been in this city, 'verbalizings' have often been extreme. When it's physical, though, a person should not need to simply tolerate it. I'd especially like to hear from @Butterfly (legal experience) and @911 (law enforcement experience) on this- what would these actions be called, and would I be reasonable to ask/expect the landlord to evict this jerk?
As I often do, I walked to a local store. As often happens, this resulted in some difficulty breathing due to heart condition. When this occurs, my only concern is to hurry up and get back to my apartment so I can sit down.
However- a guy came out of a nearby apartment and started making inappropriate remarks; the individual who lives in the apartment approached me, grabbed onto and clutched my arm, pressed tightly up against me, and put his face in my hair. As I couldn't breathe, and it was sapping my physical strength, I couldn't pull away.
The additional concern is not knowing if either of these idiots might have covid.
This was not the first incident with this jerk. A couple of times in the past I told him to keep his hands off me, and a friend who was around at the time also told him to leave me alone. So this was not a one-time incident, it's a pattern of behavior. And I don't want to have this kind of experience again.
I thought of calling the police, but awhile back this jerk committed an unprovoked physical attack on a young woman, landed her in the hospital, and despite charges of 'willful injury causing serious bodily injury' the prosecutor 'declined to prosecute' and the charges were dismissed. Made no sense to me at all.
I thought of requesting a restraining order, but after trying for the better part of two days couldn't even find out if the courthouse is open- due to covid, city/county offices are closed.
Members of the male gender take this to mean they should 'try harder' or be downright obnoxious; telling some jerk to back off is considered 'playing games,' and if you don't cooperate you're deemed 'crazy.'
During the time I've been in this city, 'verbalizings' have often been extreme. When it's physical, though, a person should not need to simply tolerate it. I'd especially like to hear from @Butterfly (legal experience) and @911 (law enforcement experience) on this- what would these actions be called, and would I be reasonable to ask/expect the landlord to evict this jerk?
As I often do, I walked to a local store. As often happens, this resulted in some difficulty breathing due to heart condition. When this occurs, my only concern is to hurry up and get back to my apartment so I can sit down.
However- a guy came out of a nearby apartment and started making inappropriate remarks; the individual who lives in the apartment approached me, grabbed onto and clutched my arm, pressed tightly up against me, and put his face in my hair. As I couldn't breathe, and it was sapping my physical strength, I couldn't pull away.
The additional concern is not knowing if either of these idiots might have covid.
This was not the first incident with this jerk. A couple of times in the past I told him to keep his hands off me, and a friend who was around at the time also told him to leave me alone. So this was not a one-time incident, it's a pattern of behavior. And I don't want to have this kind of experience again.
I thought of calling the police, but awhile back this jerk committed an unprovoked physical attack on a young woman, landed her in the hospital, and despite charges of 'willful injury causing serious bodily injury' the prosecutor 'declined to prosecute' and the charges were dismissed. Made no sense to me at all.
I thought of requesting a restraining order, but after trying for the better part of two days couldn't even find out if the courthouse is open- due to covid, city/county offices are closed.