Officer’s Brutal Assault on ‘Ghetto Rat’ Turns to Terror: Victim Revealed as Chief Federal Judge in Courthouse Nightmare

By Jamal Harris, Investigative Reporter

Washington, D.C., December 27, 2025 – In a scene straight out of a dystopian thriller, a routine morning at the U.S. District Courthouse erupted into chaos when Officer Rafael Martinez assaulted and handcuffed a woman he dismissed as a “ghetto rat” – only to discover mid-arraignment that she was none other than Chief Presiding Judge Kesha Williams, the very authority presiding over the building. Eyewitness accounts and emerging surveillance footage paint a harrowing picture of racial bias, police brutality, and a system exposed in its rawest form.

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The incident unfolded at 8:47 a.m. on December 20, as Judge Williams, 52, approached the courthouse steps in civilian attire for administrative duties. Dressed in a tailored gray suit and carrying a briefcase laden with sealed case files, she was unrecognizable without her judicial robes. Martinez, a 15-year veteran with a history of excessive force complaints – including three unresolved internal affairs probes – blocked her path, sneering, “Where do you think you’re going?” Dismissing her as a janitor or intruder, he escalated rapidly.

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Witnesses described Martinez’s tirade as venomous: “Filthy animals like you belong in cages,” he allegedly spat, invoking racial slurs that drew gasps from bystanders. When Williams asserted her right to enter, Martinez slapped her with such force that her head snapped back, causing a visible welt and neck strain later diagnosed as whiplash. Her briefcase burst open, scattering confidential documents – including notes on a high-profile drug trafficking case – across the steps. Not stopping there, he choked her, slamming her against the stone wall before twisting her arm and cuffing her wrists so tightly they left bruises.

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Fellow officers Rodriguez and Thompson filmed the assault, laughing and suggesting she hid “razor blades” or “stolen goods.” Martinez charged her with resisting arrest, assault on an officer, and disorderly conduct, marching her inside like a common criminal. “You’ve no idea what you’ve done,” Williams whispered, her voice steady amid the humiliation.

Rushed to arraignment in Courtroom 4B before Judge Elias Harrison – a colleague and friend – Williams appeared disheveled, her suit torn, face swelling. Harrison, initially blind to her identity due to the context, heard Martinez’s fabricated testimony: She “lunged” at him, carried “stolen” documents, and screamed profanities. Prosecutor Sandra Walsh, whom Williams had recently reprimanded, nodded along, calling it a “pattern of entitlement.”

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The bombshell dropped when Williams spoke, her authoritative tone piercing the room. Citing legal precedents like Hague v. CIO and debunking Martinez’s lies with facts about surveillance backups, she prompted Harrison to order her ID retrieved. Bailiff Henderson, trembling, read aloud: “Chief Presiding Judge Kesha Williams.” The courtroom froze. Martinez’s face drained of color; he stammered excuses as sweat poured down. Harrison, horrified, whispered, “Who are you?” before slamming his gavel, dismissing charges and ordering Martinez’s immediate suspension.

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Explosive details emerged post-incident: Body cam footage, initially claimed “malfunctioned,” was recovered showing Martinez’s unprovoked attack. Internal emails revealed prior warnings about his bias; one colleague flagged him for “targeting minorities.” Williams, a trailblazer as the first Black female chief judge in the district, revealed in a statement: “This wasn’t just an assault on me – it was on justice itself.” Federal probes by the DOJ and FBI are underway, with calls for hate crime charges. Martinez faces potential prison time, while the officers who filmed risk complicity indictments.

This scandal exposes deep fissures in law enforcement, sparking nationwide protests and demands for reform. Williams, undeterred, returned to the bench days later, her welt a badge of resilience. “The system failed today,” she ruled in her first post-incident case, “but it won’t fail tomorrow.”