NEWTON — Police are investigating another allegation against the Newton officer charged with indecently exposing himself to motorists at traffic stops — that he "beat" a woman in an emergency room a month ago.

"He beat my wife along with his partner," David Santana wrote on the Newton Police Department's Facebook posting about Officer Jason Miller's lewdness and misconduct arrest. "This was coming to him I'm glad the police dept did something about it and I hope the other one is also found guilty for what he did to my family."

Newton Police Chief Michael Richards said he's aware of the incident Santana mentioned.

"We're aware of his concerns regarding that, and it's something that's currently under investigation."

Richards provided an account of the incident by email that said patrol officers responded to the Newton Medical Center at 2:49 a.m. Oct. 19 "at the request of the hospital staff for a report of a female out of control and refusing to leave the emergency room."

Officers were told 24-year-old Emily D. Blohm (Santana) of Wantage was refusing to leave, the chief's email said. When the officers asked Blohm to leave, "she became disorderly and resisted patrols attempts to handcuff her and to remove her," the email said.

The email she was transported to the police station, and was released after being served complaints for defiant trespass, resisting arrest and disorderly conduct.

On Oct. 28, David Santana made a complaint regarding the treatment of his wife while he was a patient receiving treatment in the emergency room, the chief's email said.

"The Police Department is currently conducting an internal review of the matter including interviews of all witnesses and review of video recordings and will inform them both of the outcome," it said.

In comments on his own publicly viewable Facebook page, David Santana says Miller is "one of the ones that beat my wife for not wanting to leave my side while I was in the E.R."

In further comments, David Santana said "they threw her to the ground in the hospital bruised her face (expletive) up her wrist and wrote bunch of sumons (sic) on her." In another post, David Santana says the officers "just grabbed her threw her to the ground bruised her all up and then shoved his thumbs into her cheeks for no reason. No explanation of y she had to leave or if she didn't leave she would be arrested just straight up came in and slammed her into the ground."

Emily Santana writes on the same thread "the whole situation still makes me.ups3t (sic) and boggles my mind. He deserves everything coming his way."

NJ Advance Media has not yet been able to contact the Santanas directly.

While the posts reference Miller's partner, they don't name him. The email from Richards doesn't name the officers who responded to the ER.

Sussex County First Assistant Prosecutor Gregory Mueller said the allegation against Miller has not been referred to his office, and has not been deemed a criminal matter. The complaint is behind handled at the police department's level as an administrative issue, he said.

As reported Monday by NJ Advance Media, Miller, a patrolman since 2001, has been indefinitely suspended without pay pending the outcome of the luring and misconduct case.

He was accused of approaching male drivers during traffic stops, exposing his genitals "to satisfy his prurient interests" and then letting them leave without issuing traffic summonses, according to a police complaint. He was suspended, and eventually charged, after police received anonymous tips and reviewed patrol car video recordings to verify them, authorities said.

Louis C. Hochman may be reached at lhochman@njadvancemedia.com. Follow him on Twitter @LouisCHochman. Find NJ.com on Facebook.