When Jody Westby saw that the D.C. police officer had put on her blue latex gloves, she knew Dennis Stucky “was in danger,” Westby told Al Sharpton on MSNBC’s “PoliticsNation.”
“I knew Dennis was in danger. And I knew that this was a wrong situation and that they had no probable cause to be stopping him,” Westby said. “I just immediately went into a response mode and tried to defend him and protect him from this situation that I knew was not appropriate or legal.”
Stucky, a 64-year-old African-American who assists residents with gardening, other maintenance jobs and is disabled, was carrying two bags and talking to a gardener when he was spotted by D.C. police on Oct. 1, Westby told Sharpton. Police were responding to a robbery call when they stopped Stucky, who has been working in the affluent neighborhood for more than 30 years.
“Her presumption was that he was guilty, even though he wasn’t, and that’s just not how our country works,” Westby said.
Westby’s housekeeper had notified her that Stucky was being questioned by police. When she stepped out of her home and saw him sitting on the floor, Westby informed police of Stucky’s role in the community. The officer ignored her and that’s when Westby asked her housekeeper to record the incident on her cell phone.
“I’m an attorney and this is wrong. Now please leave our neighborhood,” Westby told police on the video.
Jody Westby and Dennis Stucky, who both appeared yesterday on “PoliticsNation,” received national attention when the cell phone video was posted online by The Washington Post.
“She saved my pride,” Stucky told Sharpton. “And I appreciate what she did for me.”
The video shows Westby brazenly approaching the second officer, who was sitting in the police car, to inquire about the address of the reported robbery.
“We’re videotaping this. Come on Dennis — he said you can go,” Westby said.








