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Bodycam footage shows Boston police quickly helped city councilor robbed on the Mile [+video]

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Body camera footage released to the Herald shows Boston City Councilor Tania Fernandes Anderson was confronted by a denizen of Methadone Mile, who shouted that her phone was snatched because she was trying to take a photo.

The footage, released by the Boston Police Department following a public records request, captures the moments that immediately followed the councilor’s mugging on Atkinson Street last Saturday night — an encounter that occurred a day after the city’s new plan to address escalating violence in the troubled area was announced.

It begins with Fernandes Anderson leaving a crowd of people and walking up to a cruiser with the officer wearing the body camera, knocking on his window, and alerting him in a sharp tone that a “guy in a red T-shirt stole my phone.”

When asked by the officer where her phone was when this occurred, Fernandes Anderson ignores the question, and states, “I need my phone. I’m a city councilor. I was just taking pictures. I need my phone.”

“Unbelievable,” the officer can be heard saying, before calling for backup and stepping out of his cruiser.

Fernandes Anderson then tells him, “The password is open. I need my phone,” and points to a crowd of people where the incident occurred, saying, “He’s right there.”

The councilor and officer then proceed to walk up to the group, where Fernandes Anderson confronts a woman on the mile, saying, “He was with you,” presumably alluding to the man who stole her phone.

When the officer asked Fernandes Anderson who took her phone, she stated again that the man was a companion of the woman’s, saying, “He was with her.”

“Listen, you was going to be taking pictures,” the woman shot back.

Fernandes Anderson can be heard denying this, telling the woman, “I wasn’t taking pictures. I had my phone out.”

The councilor and the officer then walked further into the area known as Mass and Cass, where tents were pitched along Atkinson Street, trash was scattered everywhere, and a man questioned by officers defended the drug activity that was occurring in full view of at least half a dozen police officers.

Upon entering the squalid scene, the officer presses Fernandes Anderson for more information on the suspect, saying, “You’ve just got to tell me who has it.”

“He has my phone,” Fernandes Anderson responds. “He took it. He stole it from my hand.”

A few minutes after the first officer was alerted, more cops arrived on scene, one of whom asked the councilor, “What, did he he just snatch it from your hand.”

“He just snatched it from my hand,” Fernandes Anderson said. “All I did was take it out so I could try to bring them food.”

To this, one of the officers tells her, “Now you know what you’re dealing with.”

As more officers approached the scene, Fernandes Anderson said the man who robbed her was hiding in one of the tents.

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