With Franklin’s license plate number in hand, Voci filed a complaint with police and picked Franklin out of a photo array, the report said. That same night, officers with the 14th District drove to Franklin’s Northwest Philly home. They arrested her around 5 a.m. the next day and towed her car to a police impound lot.
Franklin said police were at her home for nearly five hours, never once knocking on the door of her apartment to speak with her. She said she watched the whole scene unfold from her front window and didn’t step outside until a police tow truck arrived.
“I was full of tears and crying and begging them to tell me what I did and they wouldn’t,” she said.
Franklin, who said she was taken directly into police custody, was initially charged with aggravated assault, a felony, as well as possession of an instrument of crime, simple assault, tampering with evidence, and obstruction, according to court records.
After being detained for nearly 24 hours, Franklin said she was released on her own recognizance. The charges against her were later reduced to recklessly endangering another person and reckless driving, a misdemeanor, and summary offense, respectively.
“I was just sitting there literally crying, confused the whole night,” said Franklin of her time in police custody.
The Pennsylvania Attorney General’s Office handled the case because of an inherent conflict of interest with the Philadelphia District Attorney’s Office. The AG’s office withdrew the charges against Franklin entirely after she agreed to go through “a drug and alcohol evaluation” tied to a separate DUI case in Montgomery County for which she’s currently awaiting trial. Franklin completed the evaluation.
Internal Affairs investigation is ongoing
Roughly a week after the incident, Franklin filed a complaint of her own with the Internal Affairs Bureau of the Philadelphia Police Department. That investigation is active and ongoing, according to police.
A department spokesperson declined to comment on the internal investigation. Typically, citizen-driven complaints are not publicly available until the investigation is complete.
In the meantime, the Police Advisory Commission continues to actively monitor the case as it moves forward, something the cash-strapped watchdog group only has the resources and manpower to do with certain cases.
This “very unusual” case was an easy choice for the PAC, said former executive director Hans Menos, who launched the monitoring process before departing for another job.
“This is a significant incident,” said Menos, who now works for the Center for Policing Equity.
“We had a lot of complaints from various directions. We had some press inquiries. We had the actual complaint. We had a couple of community leaders all saying, ‘What are you gonna do about this?’” Menos said.
Franklin has also retained a civil attorney.
“This needs to stop before it gets out of hand,” she said. “I thank God for those who have helped me because I could have been another statistic stuck in the system.”