Mom Beaten by Teen Girls Who Had Tried to Fight Her Teen Daughter

A report claims that a Missouri mom beaten by teen girls, leaving her with a concussion, a broken nose, and two black eyes. According to the Kansas City Star, Michelle and her husband were asleep when their two daughters awoke them and said a “carload of girls” was outside their Blue Springs, Missouri, home and wanted to fight the younger one.

Her daughter, 16, was forced to come out and face the girls in the white sedan, according to 48-year-old Audo, who told the newspaper that she had gone outside and asked the girls to leave, but they refused.

To which she responds, “You know, she hasn’t come out.” Either she’s going to come out or we’re going in, they say. In response, Audo retorted, “No. You are not.” As soon as they got out of the car, the two of them ran away.

According to a police report cited by the Star, two girls, one with blonde hair and the other with black, punched Audo in the face and then piled on top of the elderly woman.

mom beaten by teen girls

When Audo’s 18-year-old daughter allegedly tried to attack her mother a second time, Audo’s husband used a cane to knock her down, according to the Star.

An account of what happened was posted on Snapchat after the girls returned to their cars, with messages like “Imagine your mom getting her ass kicked” and “Tell yo mother to come to clean my window.”

When the police arrived, they spoke with both girls, one of whom claimed that Audo “came to the side of the car and swung” at another teen who then hit her.

mom beaten by teen girls

Her accusers were charged with simple assault on May 15 and will be tried by their peers in Youth Court, where minor offenses are judged by their peers. According to Audo, the girls who attacked her were as young as 13 years old.

In his rage, Audo declared, “They think they are grown up enough to beat up someone’s mom. I think they need to pay the consequences.

“What’s going to stop them from coming back? Or doing this to somebody else?”

This could end up in Family Court, according to Blue Springs Police Chief Bob Muenz in an interview with the Star.