Current:Home > FinanceBodycam video shows encounter with woman living inside Michigan store's rooftop sign for a year -Keystone Growth Academy
Bodycam video shows encounter with woman living inside Michigan store's rooftop sign for a year
View
Date:2025-04-13 04:31:08
Body camera footage captured the moment when officers discovered a 34-year-old woman living in a Michigan supermarket's rooftop sign.
The over seven-minute footage obtained by MLive shows officers with the Midland Police Department approaching the back of the sign located on the roof of a Family Fare Supermarket in Midland on April 23. When one of the officers approaches a small door, he says, "Unlock it for me please." A woman's voice is then heard saying, "I'm trying to."
About 30 seconds into the footage, the woman, whose face is blurred, opens the door and says, "I was trying to get my stuff so I can get down right away, I'm moving out of here in 24 hours to get away from all of this." The officer responds to the woman by saying, "You're coming out right now."
The woman and officer then go back-and-forth with her explaining how she did not "want to leave her stuff." The officer then communicated what the Family Fare Supermarket's manager told him, which is that the woman living on the roof is a "big-time liability issue."
"She wants you gone," the officer told the woman living on the roof.
'How are you getting up and down off this?'
In response to the officer and the manager's demand, the woman said she would leave but had to "go talk to her boss" before vacating the sign. The officer explains to the woman she "has no time," she's coming down with them and that the manager will collect her belongings. The woman could come back in a few days to get her items, the officer says in the video.
"You're on their property so you have no standing whatsoever," the officer told the woman.
During the conversation atop the roof, the officer asked the woman, "First of all, how are you getting up and down off this? And how are you going to carry all this stuff." The woman did not directly answer the officer's question but said it would take a "few hours" to pack and move her clothing, "bedding stuff," vitamins and other belongings.
Desk, flooring, pantry found inside the space
Brennon Warren, a spokesperson for the Midland Police Department, previously confirmed to USA TODAY the woman also had a mini desk, flooring, a pantry of food, a printer and a houseplant in the supermarket sign.
The officer told the woman her move-out plan was "not going to happen." He then detailed how people in the area spotted her on the roof and nicknamed her the "Roof Ninja." The woman is heard in the video laughing at the nickname.
Before coming down, the woman alerted the officers that she had a sword in her living quarters. "It has not been used," the woman said.
Woman told officers she lived on top of roof for 'about a year'
The woman, who was not formally charged, was trespassed and the officer said she'd be arrested if she returned to gather her remaining belongings without the store's management calling first.
"(The manager) is being super cool," the officer told the woman. "When we get down there and we chat with her she's going to tell you where your stuff is going to be."
When the officer asked the woman how long she'd lived on the roof, she responded, "About a year."
"I'm not damaging anything," the woman is heard saying in the video.
'It's not for everybody, it's not even for me'
Officers also discussed with the woman how she managed to stay warm during the winter, the cleanliness of the sign and how her living space smelled like "garlic or something."
"It's not for everybody, it's not even for me," the woman told the officers about living in the sign.
Near the end of the video, the woman is seen stepping out of the sign wearing ski goggles and an all-black outfit, including a head covering.
veryGood! (48487)
Related
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- New Commanders ownership has reignited the debate over the NFL team’s old name
- Beyoncé shines bright among Hollywood stars during Renaissance concert tour stop in Los Angeles
- Wet roads and speed factored into car crashing into Denny’s restaurant, Texas police chief says
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- Minnesota seeks unifying symbol to replace state flag considered offensive to Native Americans
- Novak Djokovic beats Taylor Fritz at the US Open to reach his record 47th Grand Slam semifinal
- Suspect on the loose after brutally beating, sexually assaulting university student
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- US moves to force recall of 52 million air bag inflators that can explode and hurl shrapnel
Ranking
- Sam Taylor
- Former Trump adviser Peter Navarro's contempt trial to begin Tuesday
- Saudi Arabia and Russia move to extend oil cuts could drive up gas prices
- Revisiting Joe Jonas and Sophie Turner's Love Story Will Have You Sending Out an S.O.S
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Body of solo climber recovered from Colorado mountains
- TV anchor Ruschell Boone, who spotlighted NYC’s diverse communities, dies of pancreatic cancer at 48
- California lawmakers vote to become first state to ban caste-based discrimination
Recommendation
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Jury selection begins in contempt case against ex-Trump White House official Peter Navarro
Millions of dollars pledged as Africa's landmark climate summit enters day 2
USDA designates July flooding a disaster in Vermont, making farmers eligible for emergency loans
Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
3 lifelong Beatles fans seek to find missing Paul McCartney guitar and solve greatest mystery in rock and roll
'Friday Night Lights' author Buzz Bissinger is an unlikely hero in book-ban fight
Police broadcast message from escaped murderer's mother during manhunt, release new images of fugitive