Pittsburgh cop on leave after assault charge in connection with domestic dispute
A Pittsburgh police officer was placed on administrative leave after he pushed his wife during a late-night domestic dispute over the weekend outside his Dormont home, authorities said Wednesday.
But Office Adam Thomas Germeyer’s attorney maintains her client is innocence — and stressed that women at the scene that night “were highly intoxicated.”
Police officials said Germeyer is on paid leave until further notice.
Dormont police were dispatched around 12:45 a.m. Sunday to the Eastmont Avenue home of Germeyer, 34, according to a criminal complaint.
Germeyer’s wife, Emilia, and her friend, Elizabeth Argentine, went to the Dormont home after a night out to pick up Germeyer’s children, the complaint said.
The city cop “has not been the same lately,” his wife told Dormont police, according to the complaint.
An argument about child custody ensued while Argentine was putting one of the couple’s sons in a car seat, the complaint said.
Police said Germeyer pushed Argentine out of the house. Emilia Germeyer tried to intervene — unsuccessfully.
Geremeyer then pushed his wife, “causing her to fall and hit her chin,” the complaint said. She suffered “a small laceration on her chin” but declined medical treatment.
Germeyer “unequivocally denies these accusations against him,” said attorney Nicole Nino, who represents the officer. “Both women were highly intoxicated.”
Germeyer told police Sunday that “he was not going to let (Argentine) take his children,” the complaint said. He said he did not want the children to get into the car because his wife and Argentine “had been drinking.”
Police said Argentine told them she also fell during the incident. She was not injured.
Dormont police did not elaborate in the complaint. An officer contacted Wednesday declined comment.
Police charged Germeyer early Sunday with one count of simple assault.
Germeyer had been caring the day before for his two children, both boys, who are three years old and five months old, Nino told TribLive.
“We look forward to putting his reputation back to where it belongs,” Nino said Wednesday.
Officers took Germeyer Sunday to the Allegheny County Jail where he was arraigned and released on nonmonetary bail, court records show.
His preliminary hearing is scheduled for Dec. 10.
Germeyer joined the city police force on Aug. 20, 2018, city records show. His base salary this year is $84,872.
Justin Vellucci is a TribLive reporter covering crime and public safety in Pittsburgh and Allegheny County. A longtime freelance journalist and former reporter for the Asbury Park (N.J.) Press, he worked as a general assignment reporter at the Trib from 2006 to 2009 and returned in 2022. He can be reached at jvellucci@triblive.com.
Remove the ads from your TribLIVE reading experience but still support the journalists who create the content with TribLIVE Ad-Free.
