S.F. antiques dealer recorded spraying homeless woman with water hose is arrested

 S.F. collectibles vendor recorded showering vagrant with water hose is captured The San Francisco collectibles seller whose display was vandalized and reproved web-based after viral video showed him splashing a vagrant with a water hose was captured Wednesday and accused of battery, specialists said.



The man, Collier Gwin, 71, was captured on a misdeed battery charge, police said. He was reserved late Wednesday evening into the San Francisco Area Prison, where he was being hung on $2,500 bail, as per prison records. No trial has been set.


A close by entrepreneur recorded video of Gwin showering the lady on the walkway outside Cultivate Gwin Exhibition on Jan. 9.


Gwin told NBC Sound Region at the time that he had called police and city social administrations regularly in the past after the lady became problematic. Police have not openly recognized the lady.


"There's literally nothing that should be possible. They'll take her to a safe house, and they will turn her out in two days," he said at that point. "They will take her to the clinic. They will deliver her soon."


Encourage Gwin Exhibition in San Francisco.Google Guides


The video made public debate and drove, specialists said, to defacing at the exhibition. Cry suspended audits of the display the day after the occurrence as harsh surveys poured in.


"The supposed battery of an unhoused individual from our local area is totally unsatisfactory. Mr. Gwin will confront fitting ramifications for his activities," Lead prosecutor Brooke Jenkins expressed Wednesday in a proclamation on Twitter. "Moreover, the defacing at Cultivate Gwin display is likewise totally inadmissible and should stop — two wrongs don't make a right."


Prison records recorded no lawyer who could represent Gwin on Wednesday night. The exhibition's site was out of commission, showing the message: "This site is at present under going booked support. We will be back soon!"


The display "spends significant time in San Francisco unique expressionist compositions and figures from the last part of the 1940s through the 1960s," as per a 2018 article in the Nob Slope Journal. His clients incorporate previous California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger; the late financier David Rockefeller; previous baseball player Ichiro Suzuki; Gregg Popovich, the president and lead trainer of the San Antonio Spikes; and Joe Lacob, the greater part proprietor of the Brilliant State Champions, as indicated by the magazine.


Alex Johnson


Alex Johnson is a journalist and manager for NBC News situated in Los Angeles.


Minyvonne Burke contributed.

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