Veronica Hernandez v. Anthony Hernandez, P.O. E. Amaya #6916, Sgt. Racioppo, Sgt. McHugh, Female Caucasian Officer Doe, Rodnet K. Harrison, Suffolk County Police Department, Long Island Community Hospital, Dr. Doni Marie Rivas, Female Asian Nurse Doe, Female Caucasian LICH Employee Doe, Male African American Security Doe, Male African American LICH Orderly, Ellen Mullally, Richard T. Margulis, Debra Grimm, LICH Clinical Leadership LICH Section 1557 Coordinator, NYU Langone Health System & Hospitals

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedJanuary 13, 2026
Docket2:24-cv-08614
StatusUnknown

This text of Veronica Hernandez v. Anthony Hernandez, P.O. E. Amaya #6916, Sgt. Racioppo, Sgt. McHugh, Female Caucasian Officer Doe, Rodnet K. Harrison, Suffolk County Police Department, Long Island Community Hospital, Dr. Doni Marie Rivas, Female Asian Nurse Doe, Female Caucasian LICH Employee Doe, Male African American Security Doe, Male African American LICH Orderly, Ellen Mullally, Richard T. Margulis, Debra Grimm, LICH Clinical Leadership LICH Section 1557 Coordinator, NYU Langone Health System & Hospitals (Veronica Hernandez v. Anthony Hernandez, P.O. E. Amaya #6916, Sgt. Racioppo, Sgt. McHugh, Female Caucasian Officer Doe, Rodnet K. Harrison, Suffolk County Police Department, Long Island Community Hospital, Dr. Doni Marie Rivas, Female Asian Nurse Doe, Female Caucasian LICH Employee Doe, Male African American Security Doe, Male African American LICH Orderly, Ellen Mullally, Richard T. Margulis, Debra Grimm, LICH Clinical Leadership LICH Section 1557 Coordinator, NYU Langone Health System & Hospitals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Veronica Hernandez v. Anthony Hernandez, P.O. E. Amaya #6916, Sgt. Racioppo, Sgt. McHugh, Female Caucasian Officer Doe, Rodnet K. Harrison, Suffolk County Police Department, Long Island Community Hospital, Dr. Doni Marie Rivas, Female Asian Nurse Doe, Female Caucasian LICH Employee Doe, Male African American Security Doe, Male African American LICH Orderly, Ellen Mullally, Richard T. Margulis, Debra Grimm, LICH Clinical Leadership LICH Section 1557 Coordinator, NYU Langone Health System & Hospitals, (E.D.N.Y. 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK VERONICA HERNANDEZ, Plaintiff, -against- REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION 2:24-CV-8614 ANTHONY HERNANDEZ, P.O, E. AMAYA #6916, SGT. RACIOPPO, SGT. MCHUGH, FEMALE CAUCASIAN OFFICER DOE, RODNET K. HARRISON, SUFFOLK COUNTY POLICE DEPARTMENT, LONG ISLAND COMMUNITY HOSPITAL DR. DONI MARIE RIVAS, FEMALE ASIAN NURSE DOE, FEMALE CAUCASIAN LICH EMPLOYEE DOE, MALE AFRICAN AMERICAN SECURITY DOE, MALE AFRICAN AMERICAN LICH ORDERLY, ELLEN MULLALLY, RICHARD | T. MARGULIS, DEBRA GRIMM, LICH CLINCIAL LEADERSHIP LICH SECTION 1557 COORDINATOR, NYU LANGONE HEALTH SYSTEM & HOSPITALS, Defendants. TISCIONE, United States Magistrate Judge: On December 17, 2024, Veronica Hernandez (“Plaintiff”) sued members of the Suffolk County Police Department (“Suffolk County Defendants”), Long Island Community Hospital (“NYU Defendants”), and Anthony Hernandez alleging defamation, negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress, violation of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), and violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Suffolk County and NYU Defendants move to dismiss. The motions should be GRANTED.

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BACKGROUND! I. Parties Veronica Hernandez (“Plaintiff”) is a self-represented New York resident. Defendants can be broken into three categories. First is Anthony Hernandez, a self-represented New York resident who is married to Plaintiff. Anthony Hernandez has been inactive in the case thus far. Second are the Suffolk County Defendants. The Suffolk County Defendants are the Suffolk County Police Department (“SCPD”), SCPD Commissioner Rodney Harrison, Officer Amaya, Sergeant McHugh, and Sergeant Racioppo. The third category are the NYU Defendants. The NYU Defendants are the Long Island Community Hospital (“LICH”), Dr. Doni Marie Rivas, Female Asian nurse Doe, Female Caucasian LICH Employee Doe, Female Caucasian LICH Security Doe, Male African American Security Doe, Male African American LICH Orderly, Ellen Mullally, Richard T. Margulis, Debra Grimm, LICH Clinical Leadership LICH Section 1557 Coordinator, and NYU Langone Health System & Hospitals. Il. Statement of Facts and Procedural History On October 29, 2022, Plaintiff called SCPD alleging her husband, Anthony Hernandez, had been poisoning her with Rid-X, a product used to clean septic tanks. Compl. J§ 1-4, ECF No. 1.? The basis of the allegation is that she was suffering from throat irritation and other symptoms for over a year. /d. § 10. Plaintiff claims she was experiencing “nose bleeds, earaches, thrush, [her]

| The Court takes the factual allegations from the Complaint and assumes that they are true for purposes of this Motion. See Gamm vy. Sanderson Farms, Inc., 944 F.3d 455, 458 (2d Cir. 2019). 2 The complaint does not include page numbers, so any page numbers referenced are ECF provided numbers in the top ribbon. Paragraph numbers begin on page 11 and restart at page 28 under the heading “RELIEF SOUGHT”. Any paragraph numbers referenced are to the body of the complaint, paragraphs 1-187, prior to the “RELEIF SOUGHT” heading. -2-

finger nails were dark and brittle, [her] breath was rancid, [and she had] scarring on [her] palate and throat.” Jd. 19. Officer Amaya responded to the call and Plaintiff was transported to LICH for evaluation. Id. § 1. When Plaintiff was on route to the hospital, Anthony Hernandez allegedly informed Officer Amaya that Plaintiff was mentally ill, an allegation Plaintiff denies. /d. 11-12. Later in the complaint, however, Plaintiff states she was diagnosed with an “emotional disorder.” /d. 97. Allegedly, Anthony Hernandez told Officer Amaya that Plaintiff’s symptoms were a result of her engaging “in rampant, unspeakably promiscuous behavior with random men, thereby making [her] mouth and throat accessible and susceptible to severe and chronic bacterial infection.” /d. § 14. Plaintiff claims that “though Officer Amaya was not an active participant in the events that unfolded while I was in the care of Long Island Community Hospital,” he conveyed “false, defamatory information obtained from Anthony . . . to the ER staff [which] was the basis for their mistaken beliefs, deprivation of services and all other constitutional violations.” /d. at pg. 7. Plaintiff alleges Officer Amaya relayed the information without “fact checking.” Jd. § 4. The allegedly false information provided by Anthony Hernandez is the lynchpin and entire basis of Plaintiff’s complaint. Plaintiff claims SCPD and LICH were dismissive of her claims, treating her as if she suffered from mental illness as opposed to using “domestic violence protocol.” Jd. § 9. Even still, LICH assessed plaintiff, ran lab tests, and found no support for chemical ingestion or domestic abuse. /d. 11-13. Plaintiff alleges LICH failed to rule out “alternate causation” for her throat irritation. /d. § 18. Plaintiff claims that upon discharge, three unknown

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LICH employees menaced her and attacked her. /d. {| 27-30. There are no details provided of the alleged altercation. Subsequently, Officer Amaya informed Plaintiff there was insufficient proof to pursue formal criminal charges against Anthony Hernandez. /d. □ 26. Nevertheless, on November 11, 2022, Plaintiff visited the Fifth Precinct of the SCPD to file a criminal complaint. Jd 4 32-33. Sergeant McHugh informed Plaintiff SCPD would not pursue criminal charges because no crime had been committed. /d. § 49. Plaintiff requested to speak with a higher-ranking officer. /d. Sergeant Racioppo then spoke with Plaintiff, received her written complaint, and walked away. □□□ 4 44. Plaintiff alleges another unidentified female police officer, who Plaintiff believes handles domestic violence cases, then walked by her and ignored her. /d. J 48. Plaintiff left a second copy of her complaint with Sergeant McHugh before leaving the station. /d. § 51. Finally, Plaintiff mailed a copy of her criminal complaint to SCPD and SCPD Commissioner Rodney Harrison. /d. 451-53. Later that day, Plaintiff called SCPD to report that Anthony Hernandez was inebriated and confronted her. /d. § 55. Officer Amaya was dispatched to the scene. /d. § 57. Plaintiff alleges SCPD intentionally delayed response time. /d. 9] 55-58. Further, Plaintiff claims Officer Amaya was dispatched to purposefully intimidate her — the basis of the allegation is entirely unclear. /d. J 62. Plaintiff believes this is evidence sufficient to confirm SCPD “had taken [a] position against” her. Id. 67. Nearly two years later, in August 2024, Plaintiff called SCPD to report an unknown drunken male sitting in her neighbor’s front yard. /d. § 73. Plaintiff alleges the responding officers did not acknowledge her, and instead spoke with the unknown male, determined he was not a threat, and left the scene. /d. J] 78-79. The unknown male then left upon Plaintiff’s request without

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conformation. /d. 4§ 81-85. Plaintiff was upset with the manner SCPD handled the situation, claiming she was discriminated against. /d. JJ 84-91. The sum of Plaintiff’s allegations is that SCPD and LICH were dismissive of her domestic violence allegations. Plaintiff filed a complaint on December 17, 2024, alleging defamation, negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress, discrimination under the ADA, and civil rights violations under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff also demands criminal charges against various Defendants. Plaintiff seeks $8 billion in damages, as well as punitive damages, and myriad injunctive relief. On July 7, 2025, the Suffolk County Defendants moved to dismiss. See ECF No. 15. On September 9, 2025, the NYU Defendants moved to dismiss. See ECF No. 23. Judge Nusrat Choudhury refereed both motions to this Court for a report and recommendation.

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Veronica Hernandez v. Anthony Hernandez, P.O. E. Amaya #6916, Sgt. Racioppo, Sgt. McHugh, Female Caucasian Officer Doe, Rodnet K. Harrison, Suffolk County Police Department, Long Island Community Hospital, Dr. Doni Marie Rivas, Female Asian Nurse Doe, Female Caucasian LICH Employee Doe, Male African American Security Doe, Male African American LICH Orderly, Ellen Mullally, Richard T. Margulis, Debra Grimm, LICH Clinical Leadership LICH Section 1557 Coordinator, NYU Langone Health System & Hospitals, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veronica-hernandez-v-anthony-hernandez-po-e-amaya-6916-sgt-nyed-2026.