Another FL Woman Attacks Boyfriend for Refusing to Have Sex
Late-night TV or sex with your girlfriend? A Florida man chose TV -- and then called the cops after his rejected lover attacked him in a fit of rage.
The dramatic confrontation began when the cohabitating couple returned to their Port St. Lucie, Fla., home after a night of drinking at a friend's house, the website The Smoking Gun reports.
It ended with the 27-year-old boyfriend running down the street dressed only in his underwear, and calling 911 with his girlfriend in hot pursuit.
Stacey Ann Ortiz, 34, faces a misdemeanor domestic battery charge after the couple's spat over refused sex.
After Ortiz and her boyfriend returned home, he decided to watch TV in bed, according to a police report. But Ortiz wanted him to have sex with her.
The boyfriend refused, and the ensuing argument escalated into a physical fight. Ortiz allegedly attacked her boyfriend, who allegedly head-butted her in return.
Ortiz then chased her boyfriend -- who was dressed only in his underwear -- downstairs, into the garage, and out into the street, the police report says. Ortiz also allegedly admitted to using a metal mop handle to smash the windshield of her boyfriend's truck.
Police determined Ortiz was the primary aggressor, and took her to jail. She is now free, but has a court appearance May 8, The Smoking Gun reports.
Ortiz's attack is similar to another recent Florida case in which a woman also attacked her boyfriend over spurned sex. In both cases, the women were charged with domestic battery -- a crime punishable by jail time, probation, or community service in Florida.
Stacey Ann Ortiz could also face a vandalism charge for allegedly busting her boyfriend's truck windshield -- collateral damage in the girlfriend's alleged attack over refused sex.
Related Resources:
- Sex-seeking woman attacks boyfriend in PSL, report states (Scripps Treasure Coast Newspapers)
- State Domestic Violence Laws (FindLaw)
- Vandalism (FindLaw)
- 5 Strangest Things People Have Traded for Sex (FindLaw's Legally Weird)