Somehow, “1” looks like a “3” … apparently.

Hannah LanesHannah Lanes, a 32-year-old nursing assistant, found that out the hard way when there was a knock on her Washington, D.C. apartment door at 6:30 in the morning Thursday. But she didn’t have to wait to open it — the U.S. Marshals just burst in.

“My daughter went to the peep hole. They had the finger over the peep hole, so we couldn’t identify who they were,” Lanes says, Fox 5’s Emily Miller reports. “They just knocked down the door. We didn’t have on any clothes. I was completely naked. My daughter didn’t have on any clothes. They started screaming, telling everybody to get out of the house.”

Lanes says the Marshals used a crow bar to pry open the door and 8 people rushed in.

“They dragged me and my daughter out of the house. All I could grab was a sheet and wrap it around myself. And when they pulled us out I was like, ‘What’s going on? My son is in there,'” she says.

She says she begged them not to shoot her boy.

“Then my little boy, my 4-year-old, came walking out and they screamed at me to call him to us and I was like, ‘Please don’t shoot my son,'” Lanes tells the news station.

Lanes didn’t call the police and didn’t know why they were then. Then it happened: the Marshals realized they raided the wrong apartment.

“The lady goes, ‘Isn’t this apartment 203?’ And me and my daughter was like, ‘No!’ So then she goes, ‘Oh, we have the wrong house,'” according to Lanes.

She and her two children live in apartment 201 — which is clearly visible on the door.

After the incident, the U.S. Marshals Service released a statement, admitting the error:

Whenever U.S. Marshals deputies and task force officers enter private residences, they do so in accordance with the laws of the United States. 

Today, while serving both a search warrant and an arrest warrant for a fugitive wanted for First and Second Degree Child Sexual Abuse, USMS task force members mistakenly breached the door of a neighboring apartment.  Immediately thereafter, the fugitive was apprehended in his nearby apartment.  USMS personnel notified building management, who then repaired the door locks and provided the occupant with new keys prior to the USMS personnel leaving the scene.  

The government invited Lanes or “any member of the public who believes that their property has been damaged as a result of a USMS operation may submit a claim under the Federal Tort Claims Act.”

That’s not much solace.

“So we’re standing on the balcony, outside with no clothes on, shaking, crying, scared. Guns have been pointed at us from the time we wake up and they have the wrong house,” she says.