close
close

Woman shows a firearm at Dunkin 'Donut's Drive-Thru companion, say charges

The Eboni Gaither, 35 based in Webster Grove, will be exposed to several criminal charges on Friday after the incident.

St. Louis County, Mo.-a woman from Webster Grove directed a firearm on a Dunkin 'Donut's Drive-Thru companion, although on Friday she received a refund for her order in St. Louis County, the criminal complaint said.

According to an investigator of the Rock Hill Police Department, Eboni Gaither, 35, argued with the companion about her order and ultimately received a refund.

“The defendant, apparently unsatisfied, takes the ceramic tip container from the switch and throws it,” the investigator wrote. “Then she throws the food on the victim.”

The companion followed Gaither, recorded a video and tried to get a photo of Gaithher's license plate.

“The defendant shows a semi-automatic pistol on the victim,” the investigator wrote. “The victim states that law enforcement will include.”

According to court files, Gaither got out of her car and turned to the victim before trying to hit her in the face.

The film's film material of the victim's cell phone and surveillance cameras found the film material of the incident.

Gaither is charged with illegal use of a weapon, the attack of the fourth degree and the property damage in order to pull out a weapon during the argument, to swing her fists on the victim's head and break the tips. Their bond was set to 50,000 US dollars, only cash, 10% not authorized.

Resources for victims of crime:

If you have become the victim of a crime or know someone it was, 5 has created a list of resources on your side.

The victim of the crime of St. Louis has several programs to support victims of crime. The programs of the criminal victim center range from direct services to victims of crime as well as “awareness and changes in the systems that they encounter”.

Life outside of violence “helps those who are violated by stabbing, shot or assault, the treatment, support and resources they need to find alternatives to end the cycle of violence.”

The Urban League of Metropolitan St. Louis has the neighborhood healing network, which serves people who have experienced crime, violence or victims of an incident that has caused trauma.

Bullet-related Injury Clinic (BRIC) is a clinic based in the municipality in St. Louis that helps people after they have been injured by a ball. The BRIC was founded to help people who were released from the emergency room after the shot.