Woman charged with setting swarm of bees on deputies at eviction
A Massachusetts woman who released a swarm of bees on sheriffâs deputies as they tried to serve an eviction notice is facing multiple assault and battery charges, US authorities have said.
Rorie S Woods, 55, pleaded not guilty at her arraignment on October 12 in Springfield District Court and was released without bail, Masslive.com reported.
Woods and other protesters maintain that they were trying to prevent a wrongful eviction.
The homeowner, Alton King, brought evidence of a bankruptcy stay to court the next day, at which point âeverything should have stoppedâ, said Grace Ross of the Massachusetts Alliance Against Predatory Lending.
Hampden County deputies were met by protesters when they went to the property in Longmeadow on the morning of October 12, according to the official department report.
Woods, who lives in Hadley, arrived in an SUV towing a trailer carrying bee hives and started âshakingâ them, breaking the cover off one and causing hundreds of bees to swarm out and initially sting one deputy, according to the report.
The woman, who is alleged to have put on a beekeeperâs suit to protect herself, was eventually handcuffed but not before several more sheriffâs department employees were stung, including three who are allergic to bees, the report said.
When Woods was told that several officers were allergic, she said: âOh, youâre allergic? Good,â according to the report.
Hampden County Sheriff Nick Cocchi said Woods could have faced more serious charges if anything worse had happened.
âWe had one staff member go the hospital, and, luckily, he was all right,â Mr Cocchi said.
The deputies were simply doing their duty, Chief Deputy Sheriff Robert Hoffman said.
âWe had a court order thatâs been presented to us and itâs our job to effectuate that court order,â Mr Hoffman said.
âIt was Miss Woodsâ arrival with her vehicle and her trailer that really caused things to go haywire.â




