I understand the desire to physically step in and confront the criminal(In my more foolish days I did something sort of along those lines, confronting some kids who were trespassing in a neighbor's empty house), but that might not be the best thing to do. Think about it...you step in, physically put your hands on the abuser, probably beat them up a little and now *you've* turned into someone who has committed assault. And you better believe that this crazy woman would press charges.
Any of the following might be better than a physical altercation - getting a police officer to intervene, yelling at the woman to stop while getting help, calling "911" on your cell phone while honking your car horn...
if you physically *stop* all the hitting before getting the authorities, how will charges be pressed against the woman who attacked the child? Wouldn't it make bringing this criminal to justice easier if police officers actually saw the crime physically being committed?
hollister, you did the right thing, you got help. In Red Cross training, I've always been told that the most important thing is to break what others call The Bystander Effect and get help - call "911" or the police or the ambulance - DO something, don't just stand there!
agnes!