Mother, 23, who was violently separated from her toddler during an arrest is freed from jail 

A 23-year-old mother who was violently separated from her toddler son during an arrest at a Brooklyn social services office has been freed from jail. 

Judge Craig Walker ordered Jazmine Headley’s release Tuesday night.

Walker called the video of the incident ‘horrific’ and said releasing her with no bail was ‘the right thing to do’, according to the New York Times. 

Headley gave a statement to reporters following her release thanking her supporters.

‘I just want to thank everybody and all the support that I’ve been getting in New York and just all the great people who has been supporting me,’ she said. 

 

Jazmine Headley (pictured, after her release), 23, who was violently separated from her toddler son during an arrest at a Brooklyn social services office was freed from Rikers Island jail Tuesday night

‘I’m so grateful to everyone and I’m just happy to be free and I just need to see my boy,’ an emotional Headley said. 

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez said that in deciding to drop the case against Headley, he was acting ‘in the interest of justice’.

Headley has been held at the Rikers Island jail since Friday on charges including obstructing governmental administration, resisting arrest, endangering the welfare of a child and trespassing, stemming from her altercation with a guard in a crowded waiting room of a food assistance office.

Headley (pictured) has been held at the Rikers Island jail since Friday on multiple charges, including resisting arrest 

Headley (pictured) has been held at the Rikers Island jail since Friday on multiple charges, including resisting arrest 

‘Like everyone who watched the arrest of Jazmine Headley, I was horrified by the violence depicted in the video,’ Gonzalez said in his statement. 

‘It is clear to me that this incident should have been handled diffidently.’ 

Gonzalez pointed a finger of blame at the guard, accusing him of escalating the situation as Headley was getting ready to leave with her 18-month-old child, and as a result ‘creating an awful scenario of a baby being torn from is mother’.

Brooklyn’s chief prosecutor went on to say that pursuing this case ‘will not serve any purpose’.

She remained held until Tuesday night on an unrelated warrant issued in New Jersey, where the woman faces charges of credit card theft. 

Her lawyer, Brooklyn Defender Services founder and director Lisa Schreibersdorf, argued that her client did not steal the cards, but was in a car with a man who committed the theft. 

The video of Headley’s arrest, posted to social media by an onlooker, caused a furor, spurring outrage from those who say it’s indicative of how low-income social service recipients are treated. 

The video shows Headley on the floor at a SNAP center in Boerum Hill, New York

Police officers, who were called to reports of a woman being disorderly and blocking a hallway, can be seen trying to physically move the woman

The video (above) shows Headley on the floor at a SNAP center in Boerum Hill, New York

At one point in the struggle they tried to take her one-year-old out of her arms as the woman cried: 'I¿m begging you please'

City Council Speaker Corey Johnson called the incident 'unacceptable, appalling and heartbreaking'

At one point in the struggle they tried to take her one-year-old out of her arms as the woman cried: ‘I’m begging you please’

It showed Headley ending up lying face-up on the floor, and a police officer at another point pulling her stun gun out and aiming it at the upset crowd. 

Officials said the situation is being reviewed by the New York Police Department and the Department of Social Services. 

Two city employees at the Boereum Hill SNAP center have been placed on modified duty in connection to the incident.

‘The consequences this young and desperate mother has already suffered as a result of this arrest far outweigh any conduct that may have led to it: she and her baby have been traumatized, she was jailed on an unrelated warrant and may face additional collateral consequences,’ Gonzalez said of the case on Tuesday. 

At one point during the struggle seen in the now-viral video, in order to arrest Headley, officers tried to yank her son out of her arms as she cried: ‘They’re hurting my son… I’m begging you please.’

Other people can be heard screaming in the background as one woman shrieked: ‘Oh my God, oh my God, look what they’re doing to us, look what they’re doing to her.’

One officer pulled out a stun gun as an onlooker shouted: ‘There’s a f***ing baby in her hands!’

The video of Headley's (pictured) arrest, posted to social media by an onlooker, caused a furor, spurring outrage from those who say it¿s indicative of how low-income social service recipients are treated

Jazmine 'Jazzy' Headley

The video of Headley’s (left and right) arrest, posted to social media by an onlooker, caused a furor, spurring outrage from those who say it’s indicative of how low-income social service recipients are treated

Headley’s mother, Jacqueline Jenkins, said her daughter, who is a cleaner, was at the center to collect daycare vouchers for a nanny who looks after her one-year-old son, Damone. 

She said Headley sat on floor because there were no chairs available and that a security guard called police after she refused to stand up.

‘I can’t believe the NYPD, how they handled it, the force of what they did to grab my grandson like that,’ Jenkins, who is currently caring for her grandson, told NBC New York. ‘He was like a rag doll.’  

The video was posted to Facebook where it sparked outrage from viewers.

The woman who uploaded it wrote: ‘[The mom] made the security guard feel dumb so she called the cops on her and this was the outcome. 

‘She had her baby in her hands the whole time. I’m so f***ing disgusted with the NYPD.’ 

City Council Speaker Corey Johnson called the incident ‘unacceptable, appalling and heartbreaking’.

He tweeted: ‘I’d like to understand what transpired and how these officers or the NYPD justifies this. It’s hard to watch this video.’

State Attorney General-elect Letitia James, released a statement saying: ‘No mother should have to experience the trauma and humiliation we all witnessed in this video.’

She added: ‘Being poor is not a crime. The actions of the NYPD in this video are appalling and contemptible. 

‘A full investigation must be conducted immediately, and the results should be made public so there is a transparent accounting of how this horrific situation occurred. 

‘All involved officers, including the assigned supervisor, should be assigned desk duty pending the investigation results.’ 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk