A woke crusader who allegedly sent violent threats to a pair of famous Lesbian bars shouldn’t be subjected to a psych evaluation — and was free to go, a criminal court judge ruled Wednesday.
Judge Louis Nock said Anne Marie Bompart — whose been waging a one woman war against the Cubbyhole and Henrietta Hudson in which she has accused the Sapphic watering holes of racism — isn’t in need of a mental exam, despite accusations that she threatened to “stomp” a bar worker’s dog to death.
The bars have been fighting back against Bompart’s racial claims in a civil defamation suit — and after she had made numerous, outrageous threats and claims in the case, James d’Auguste issued the request that a criminal judge issue a 730 psychiatric exam for her.
However, Nock shot that idea down at her arraignment Wednesday, thus declining to use an option that could have kept her held behind in a psych ward for 72 hours.
“I too, at this present moment, see no reason why a 730 evaluation should be ordered,” said Judge Louis Nock at Bompart’s arraignment.
D’Auguste’s request for the mental exam came last week at a hearing, after which Bompart was arrested on criminal charges of harassment charges. The judge noted the impending arrest in his quest for the mental exam.
Bompart was hit with charges of aggravated harassment for sending violent messages to the bars as part of her “woke” campaign to get the watering holes canceled for allegedly mistreating non-white patrons.
In one, she allegedly promised to one bartender that she would “stomp the s— out of his dog in front of him.”
The request for the mental exam was considered at Bompart’s arraignment on the criminal charges Wednesday.
Her attorney, Gerard Lucciola, successfully argued against the test, saying his client is stable, “articulate” and knows who she is.
“This is another attempt by the plaintiffs to get an advantage and use the criminal justice system [and a 730 exam] as some kind of sword, your honor,” Lucciola said in court.
After turning down the request for the exam, the criminal judge did agree to a request for a protection order that would bar Bompart from approaching the bar workers who filed complaints against her.
Bompart ultimately pled not guilty to her harassment charges and was released on her own recognizance. Bompart and her lawyer declined to comment.
The decision was handed down as a new state bill looks to expand the use of the court-ordered 730 exam following a loophole that allowed Taylor Swift’s creepy stalker to immediately return to her apartment after he was deemed “unfit” for trial, and his misdemeanor case was tossed.
Thomas Shanahan, the attorney representing Henrietta Hudson and Cubbyhole, said he was disappointed that the 730 exam was not granted for Bompart.
“This is the most egregious example,” he said, “but every small business I represent is having this issue of [dealing] with people with mental health problems coming into their businesses and creating situations that are unsafe.”
And the West Village hotspots are not along in taking action against Bompart, The Post has learned.
At Metropolitan Bar in Williamsburg, a bartender said Bompart has been banned since late last year, and that staff carry a photo of her.
The bartender, who called her “the crazy girl” and declined to give his name, said she verbally harassed a karaoke host — and threatened a bartender on social media afterwards.
“It’s frightening people,” the bartender said of her behavior.
“She’s definitely not welcome here,” a bartender at Park Slope, Ginger’s Bar told The Post. “Especially [now that] she has a warrant.”