Parents Charged With Trying to Abandon Kid at Police Station

Young girl Speaks to NBCNewYork

A different Wells Fargo chief executive met a similar kind of anger from Congress on Tuesday, with politicians from both major parties saying they feel the bank has done little to change its culture since a scandal over its sales practices. Tim Sloan appeared in front of the Senate Banking Committee in Washington, D.C., about a year since his predecessor did the same to try to explain how employees trying to meet ambitious sales goals created millions of accounts without customers knowing about or authorizing them. Sloan apologized again and said the bank was committed to its customers. Some lawmakers weren’t in a forgiving mood. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp, a Democrat from North Dakota, expressed anger about the sales practices as well as a later auto insurance scandal involving customers signed up for coverage they didn’t want.

Police on Staten Island say 25-year old Annette Gerhardt and 27-year Gerardo Santiago tried to leave their 6-year old daughter at the 120 precinct station house Friday.

Officers say the girl's mother told them, "I can't take it anymore. She is uncontrollable. I'm going to leave her here. If you don't take her, I will take her to the firehouse."

So the officers arrested both parents, charging them with endangering the welfare of a child.

But the girl's parents say the police officers totally overreacted to what they say was a joke aimed at teaching their daughter a lesson.

It all began when Enayla Santiago's first grade teacher sent a letter home telling her parents that their daughter had been acting up in class, talking and getting up out of her seat.

So her parents say the decided to take her to the station house to scare her.

"Go in there and tell her this is where bad boys and girls go and have her say, 'Mommy, Mommy, I'll be good. I don't see anything wrong with that, said Gerardo Santiago, the girl's father.

"I never said I wanted to leave her there. Those words never came out of my mouth," said Annette Gerhardt, the girl's mother.

But Staten Island District Attorney Dan Donovan says the officers did the right thing by not taking a chance, "and possibly preventing these parents from abandoning the girl somewhere less safe."

When asked about what happened, Enayla Santiago said, "It was too scary."

The Administration for Children's Service is now working with the family while the District Attorney contemplates whether to move forward with criminal charges.

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