
Details of the incident involving Miami Heat swingman Gerald Green are coming out and it’s getting weirder and weirder as they get released.
Last week, it was reported that Green was uncontrollable and he was acting strange in the lobby of his Miami condo. He had to be calmed down by his former teammate, Mario Chalmers, and he was also found unconscious and bloody.
The Miami Heat elected to suspend Green for two games yesterday and now some information from the police report has been released and it details Green getting physical with someone trying to help him out.
Following from Manny Navarro and Chuck Rabin of the Miami Herald.
Nov. 4 City of Miami police incident report shed more light. Green, 29, showed up at the front desk of his condo with bloody hands, asked a clerk to call paramedics, then walked outside into the valet area, where he collapsed.
Then Green recovered, walked back inside and punched someone in the eye who was trying to stop him from going back up to his apartment, the report says.
“Mr. Green tried to make his way up to his unit. When victim #1 tried to hold Mr. Green in the lobby area for fire rescue, Mr. Green punched the victim in the right eye,” Miami police officer John Collins wrote in his report.
Though the incident report lists Viannett Jusino Agosto as a victim and says she was transported to Jackson Memorial Hospital, police said that was a mistake and that Agosto was merely a witness. The victim, who isn’t named, chose not to press charges, police said.
The eight-page report says police arrived at the condo at 1100 Biscayne Boulevard at 10:46 a.m. It appears to be written by supervising officer who arrived at the scene after the initial incident, then conducted interviews.
It says that when Collins arrived, Green was already restrained and in handcuffs, and that police escorted Miami Fire Rescue as they drove Green to Jackson Memorial. Police assisted fire rescue in placing Green on a stretcher and carried him to the ambulance.
“Fire rescue had the patient restrained due to the patient becoming very loud and verbally combative,” the report says. “Fire rescue requested that the Sgt. handcuff the patient.”