A North Carolina woman says police pointed “military-style rifles” at her parents and disabled son as they executed a search warrant for stolen cell phones.

LaDonna Clark recounted the incident Tuesday before the Raleigh City Council, which has asked for a review of the November 2018 search of the family’s home, reported WRAL-TV.

“My senior citizen parents, as well as my 6-year-old son with autism and cerebral palsy, experienced the most terrorizing experience of their lives,” Clark told city officials. “On a 35-degree and rainy night, my son with autism was forced out of the home with military-style rifles aimed at him and made to sit on the cold, wet ground for over an hour by RPD SWAT.”

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Police were looking for cell phones stolen during an AT&T store robbery, and one of the suspects was identified as Brian Lamonte Clark, who lived at the family’s home.

LaDonna Clark said the 22-year-old is a family relative, reported WTVD-TV, but she said he was not home when officers executed the search warrant.

Brian Clark has previously been charged with second-degree burglary, breaking-and-entering and robbery, according to court records, and the 22-year-old was accused of threatening AT&T employees with a semi-automatic gun and then stealing $50,000 worth of phones and other electronics.

He was later arrested and charged with armed robbery and other felonies.

Clark filed a complaint with the police department and requested video of the incident, which she said traumatized her son and parents, but she said an internal affairs officer said police “did nothing wrong” and refused to give her the complaint number associated with the case.

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“The joke was on me, because not only was I not allowed to see the footage of my son being terrorized,” Clark said, “I was told by Sgt. Neville that I could not get an I.A. number and I would need to identify the actual offenses of the officers involved, as well as do a verbal interview before I would be able to get an I.A. number.”

Clark said inaction from elected officials essentially gave Raleigh police a “free pass … to demonize black citizens.”

Councilmember Corey Branch asked the city manager to produce a report on the incident.