Phoenix police brutality girl




















Multiple defense attorneys who have dealt with McGillis on DUI cases criticized his conduct in the street and in court. Caroline Aeed, another longtime attorney who handles DUI cases and has cross-examined McGillis over the years, said she was not surprised to learn of this latest case. In , she represented a year-old woman who got in a minor car accident and was accused of DUI. The woman became scared of having McGillis draw her blood given his aggressive stance, her attorney wrote.

She sustained injuries to her face, arms and legs. That case was not recorded on camera and the officer denied the physical assault claims and was not disciplined, Aeed said. His vehicle records contradicted his claims about the sequence of his arrest, the defense attorneys argued. Police investigators concluded there was no misconduct. Attorneys said they hoped the new body-camera footage would force the police department to take allegations seriously.

For her part, Valenzuela said the arrest and subsequent criminal cases have had a long-term impact. US policing. This article is more than 1 year old. Sam Levin in Los Angeles. Police called medics to the scene, who she said bandaged her with some type of gauze. She was not, however, seen by a doctor or given burn treatment, despite the fact that the sidewalk had burned through a layer of skin, leaving her arm with bright pink exposed flesh, photos show.

Instead, police took her to the precinct, booking her for resisting arrest and assault against multiple officers on the scene. Her mother later took her to the emergency room, where she was diagnosed with second-degree burns.

Police said Trotter admitted to physically fighting another girl and that she later apologized for her behavior with police. The reports did not document any injuries to the officers, and there were no allegations that the other girl suffered serious injuries. Two days after publication, police provided the Guardian with bus surveillance footage, which captured part of the fight between the two teenagers and showed officers moving to arrest Trotter after the fight had ended.

The footage, taken from inside the bus at a distance, appears to shows three officers taking her to the ground and on top of her as they hold her down. Trotter is not the first Phoenix resident to be arrested in a questionable manner during a heatwave. Last month, Phoenix police released body-camera footage showing the arrest of Ramon Timothy Lopez, 28, who died in custody after he was held on asphalt for several minutes in degree heat. Police have not disclosed a cause of death.

He was fighting for his life, and he lost. All children should be seen that way. The department, one of the deadliest in the country, also disproportionately kills Black and Latino residents. Hamel argued that the best way to minimize this kind of violence was to reduce interactions between police and civilians, which is a key part of the growing calls across the country to defund police agencies. But the couple have said that is not true, stating that one of the officers pushed Mr.

The couple said that the officers violated their civil rights, and their lawyer, Thomas C. Horne, a former Arizona state attorney general, filed a notice of claim — a precursor to a lawsuit — that said the couple had not realized until they were back at their car that their 4-year-old daughter had walked out of the store with a doll.

Horne said on Wednesday. Horne wrote, and then opened the door and began to shout at Mr. A second officer pointed a gun at Ms. Horne wrote. The door to the car was malfunctioning and the couple could not get out of the car, the notice said.



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