New York City Jury Hears 911 Call From A Sex Abuse Victim
NEW YORK (AP) _ Through sobs, the victim of a Halloween 2005 sexual assault told a 911 operator how her assailant had used a disguise to get into her apartment and begin a 13-hour attack. <br/><br/>``He
Wednesday, May 2nd 2007, 7:26 am
By: News On 6
NEW YORK (AP) _ Through sobs, the victim of a Halloween 2005 sexual assault told a 911 operator how her assailant had used a disguise to get into her apartment and begin a 13-hour attack.
``He banged on the door in a Fire Department uniform,'' the victim said, according to a tape of the call played in court Tuesday. ``He said there was a fire outside, but I think he just made that up. I think it was smoke bomb or something.''
Emergency operator Marian Grillo testified about the woman's call on the morning of Nov. 1, 2005, made after her attacker had left and when she finally escaped her bonds. The victim, weeping and screaming, detailed her night of terror.
``He wanted to kill me!'' the victim shouted near the start of her call. Grillo said she urged the woman to calm down, but the caller remained upset _ even when police officers arrived at her Manhattan apartment, where the assault took place.
The victim was so rattled by her encounter with the phony firefighter that she refused to let the officers inside until they showed badges and official IDs, testified Jeannia Robinette, the woman's best friend.
The tape and testimony came during the second day of the trial of freelance journalist Peter Braunstein, who is charged with kidnapping, burglary, sex abuse and robbery. The victim testified on Monday that Braunstein was wearing fireman's gear, right down to a plastic shield on his face, when he drugged and abused her, starting on the night of Oct. 31, 2005.
The 911 call came two hours after the attacker left her tied to her bed, naked but for a pair of thong underpants and high-heeled sandals he had put on her. The Associated Press is not identifying the woman because she reported being the victim of a sex crime.
On the 911 call, the operator asked whether the man had any weapons.
The victim said he had a knife, a gun and a videocamera, and told Grillo, ``He was taping me while I was naked.''
The woman had been a co-worker of Braunstein's at Fairchild Publications, publisher of Women's Wear Daily and W magazine. She testified that he was someone she would see in the hallways occasionally, but they didn't know one another.
Braunstein has pleaded not guilty, but his lawyers concede that he committed most of the crimes charged. They say he is mentally ill and is unable to form the intent that would make him criminally responsible for the attack.
``This trial is about why it happened,'' defense attorney Celia Gordon told the jury in opening remarks.
But Assistant District Attorney Maxine Rosenthal told the jury that Braunstein, who had been fired from his job and dumped by his girlfriend, planned the attack ``out of anger and a need for revenge.''
Rosenthal said he ordered the firefighter's gear, the BB gun, the knife, a replica Detroit police badge, handcuffs and materials for making smoke bombs from Internet sites weeks before he talked his way into the woman's apartment.
When he was captured on the University of Memphis campus six weeks after the attack, Braunstein stabbed himself in the neck with a dagger. He was subdued by police with pepper spray and arrested Dec. 16, 2005.
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