New York police again under fire after pepper-spraying of mother

AFP
Police in the New York city of Rochester again face fire after body-cam video shows them forcing a woman, holding her 3-year-old daughter, to the ground and pepper-spraying her.
AFP
New York police again under fire after pepper-spraying of mother
AFP

Demonstrators march in a protest demanding justice for George Floyd on Saturday.

Police in the New York city of Rochester are again under scrutiny after body-cam video shows them forcing a woman, holding her 3-year-old daughter, to the ground and pepper-spraying her.

Rochester police had come under fire in recent months over two earlier episodes that raised questions about their use of force.

Police video of the latest incident, which took place February 22 and was released on Friday, shows an officer stopping a woman on the snow-covered shoulder of a road, telling her a nearby business had accused her of stealing.

The woman, carrying her tiny daughter in one arm, insists that she stole nothing and partially empties her purse to show the officer.

But when the officer refuses to let her leave, the woman suddenly turns and runs, her child still in her arms. Several officers give chase, catch her and force her to the ground.

When the woman struggles back to her feet and grabs for her screaming daughter, police use pepper spray to subdue her and force her back to the ground.

“Stop. Oh my God, what is wrong with her?” One officer is heard saying of the mother.

The child was not pepper-sprayed directly, according to the Democrat & Chronicle newspaper.

But officials who saw the footage said she could have been exposed.

The city’s Police Accountability Board, made up entirely of civilians, said it was “disturbed” by the video, which it released.

Board Chair Shani Wilson told reporters that there were “troubling parallels” to an incident in late January in which a 9-year-old girl was handcuffed and pepper-sprayed.

“Both involved black people obviously in crisis, both involved officers using pepper spray on or around a lack child,” Wilson said.

She said the Rochester Police Department “needs to fundamentally change its organizational culture.”

And City Council President Loretta Scott said “the amount of force used, coupled with the emotional damage suffered by this child, was disproportionate to the alleged crime.”

The woman was finally charged with trespassing and the arresting police officer was placed on administrative leave pending an internal investigation.

In September, Rochester police came under attack after video showed the arrest of Daniel Prude, a 41-year-old black man.

Prude was walking naked, high on drugs, when police put a hood over his head to prevent him spitting, then held him face-down on the pavement until he stopped breathing.

He died a week later.

A medical examiner ruled Prude’s death a homicide, but a grand jury declined to indict any officers.

Floyd murder trial begins

Nine months after George Floyd’s death laid bare the racial wounds in the United States, the white policeman charged with murdering the 46-year-old Black man is going on trial.

Jury selection begins in the city of Minneapolis today in the case against Derek Chauvin, who was filmed with his knee on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes as the man struggled to breathe.

The shocking footage of Floyd’s death sparked a wave of Black Lives Matter protests against police brutality and racial injustice across the country and in capitals around the world.

Chauvin’s case promises to be extraordinary in many respects: it will feature star attorneys, be held under tight security and broadcast live.



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