
When he told Roberta Levy their daughter and police were coming over, she stopped her pursuit and said she was going to her aunt's house. "I feared for my life and my daughter's life," Douglas Levy testified. "She could have slipped and hit (our daughter) with (the scissors). If (our daughter) hadn't been there, I would have been stabbed." Police arrived and interviewed Douglas Levy and his young daughter. After they left, Roberta Levy returned and tried getting back in the house, her husband said. Police returned to the home. According to court records, Roberta Levy told police her husband has been verbally abusive, has been pitting their daughter against her, and won't feed her. Levy added she was heating up a microwave burrito and grabbed the scissors to cut open the package.
She and her husband started arguing while she was holding the scissors, but she denied threatening or assaulting him. Cross-examined by defense attorney Andrea L. LaBean, Douglas Levy said he and his wife have an odd relationship and that she had got out of a substance abuse rehab a few days before the incident. The hearing ended with Bay County Assistant Prosecutor Jeffrey Stroud asking District Judge Mark E. Janer to bind Roberta Levy's case over to Circuit Court for trial. Janer obliged and bound Levy's case over to the higher court. Levy is charged with single counts of assault with a dangerous weapon and domestic violence. The former is a four-year felony, while the latter is a 93-day misdemeanor.
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