In July 2013, Louise Goldsberry had just finished dinner with her boyfriend at her apartment. She was washing the dishes when she noticed something outside her kitchen window – someone was watching her.

“I caught movement out of my peripheral vision and I look up and see a guy going like this with a big assault rifle,” she recalled. “I thought, ‘Oh my God, this is a home invasion.’”

Goldsberry crawled to her room, and grabbed her gun, when the intruder made his way inside.

She said the man yelled “This is the fu**ing police and we’re going to kill you if you don’t put down the gun!”

The two had a tense standoff. Turns out, it was the SWAT team looking for a sexual battery suspect.

Goldsberry and her boyfriend were handcuffed as the home was searched.

“[They] came in here and searched without a warrant, without probable cause,” she said. “I hadn’t done anything, it just blew my mind.”

But they had the wrong house, so the team released the handcuffs and left.

Goldsberry said, “As an American citizen, I’m starting to think what country do I live in, where they can have your self almost killed over a mistake.”