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NYPD Distancing Arrests: Many Non-Whites, At Times Violently

In this April 29, 2020 image made from video provided by Adegoke Atunbi, New York City police officers wrestle a man to the ground while making an arrest in the Brooklyn borough of New York. The video is among those posted on social media recently that show the NYPD using physical force while out enforcing the city's 6-foot-of-distance social distance rule. Despite mounting pressure from watchdogs to stop using police to enforce social distancing, Mayor Bill de Blasio stood by the practice on Thursday, May 7, saying: "We're not going to sideline the NYPD." (Adegoke Atunbi via AP)

One newly surfaced video of social distancing enforcement gone wrong in New York City shows a police officer running at a black man and throwing him to the ground for mouthing off. Another shows an officer punching a man in the head as he lay pinned to a sidewalk, unable to fight back.

Despite mounting pressure to stop using police to enforce social distancing and data showing that such arrests disproportionately affect people of color, Mayor Bill de Blasio stood by the practice on Thursday, saying: “We’re not going to sideline the NYPD.”

“I am not making my decisions based on a very few interactions that were handled poorly or went bad,” de Blasio said. “I’m making my decisions based on the millions of interactions that are going right.”

The new videos, posted online after an officer was recorded Saturday pulling a stun gun on a man and violently taking him to the ground, stand in sharp contrast to photos and video tweeted by the NYPD showing friendly officers handing out face masks and gently reminding people to stay 6 feet apart.

Police watchdogs say the conduct shown in the videos suggests officers are using social distancing during the pandemic as a pretext to harass people of color along the lines of stop and frisk, a practice curtailed in recent years in which officers stop people on the streets and search them for weapons.

The Brooklyn district attorney’s office released data late Thursday showing that of the 40 people arrested for social distancing violations in the borough since mid-March, 35 were black and 4 were Hispanic. All cases were dropped.

District Attorney Eric Gonzalez’s office called the incidents in the videos “disturbing” and said his office is reviewing them to determine if disciplinary recommendations or criminal charges for the officers are warranted.

“Police are using enforcement of social distancing as cover to initiate and engage in abusive broken windows policing, with threats and physical attacks against New Yorkers,” Joo-Hyun Kang, the director of Communities United for Police Reform, said. “It’s time for Mayor de Blasio to step in and remove the NYPD immediately from all social distancing enforcement.”

One of the new videos shows an officer knocking a 32-year-old man to the ground with his arm Monday night in Brooklyn after police say he took a “fighting stance” as officers wrestled his stepbrother against a squad car. Police say the men were part of a group that failed to disperse when told to comply with social distancing rules.

Another video, recorded Saturday, shows an officer throwing a 20-year-old black man to the ground and arresting him at Brooklyn’s Brower Park moments after the man was heard shouting insults at officers hauling his friend away in handcuffs. Police said both men were gang members with a history of arrests.

Other videos posted in recent days showed: an officer punching a man in the head as he lay on a sidewalk while being apprehended and a bystander being slugged in the face and thrown into a closed storefront by an officer after he recorded another officer taking a swing at a man during a chaotic social distancing sweep.

“I thought police were meant to de-escalate a situation, not escalate it,” said the roughed up bystander, Adegoke Atunbi, who was cited for disorderly conduct. “It’s a scary thing to be put on the ground. You have 6-7 people on top of you. You have no way to defend yourself, thinking you might die. It does something to your mind.”

Some officers in the videos weren’t wearing protective masks.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea said the incidents should be evaluated on a case-by-case basis and that “a punch should not be assumed to be excessive force.” Under their police academy training, officers are allowed to punch someone when warranted as part of an escalating progression of force, he said.

The police department’s social distancing patrols have exacerbated sometimes tense relations between officers and the city’s various minority communities.

Last week, officers twice interrupted crowded funerals in Brooklyn’s Hasidic Jewish community to crack down on social distancing violators. De Blasio stoked divisions further with a series of tweets singling out Jews for ignoring a ban on large gatherings.

On Saturday, officer Francisco Garcia was caught on video slapping and punching a black man, 33-year-old Donni Wright, and dragging him to a sidewalk after leveling him in a crosswalk near a Manhattan public housing complex. Garcia was stripped of his gun and badge and placed on desk duty pending an internal investigation.

On Sunday, police issued at least one social distancing summons at a small protest organized by an LGBT group outside a Manhattan hospital, pitting free speech and public health concerns. De Blasio and Shea defended the response, wrongly arguing people had no right to protest during a pandemic.

Donna Lieberman, executive director of the New York Civil Liberties Union, said stay-at-home and other orders de Blasio issued in response to the crisis don’t give police “unfettered — and unconstitutional — discretion to ban all protest activity.”

“The right to protest is a bedrock of our nation’s principles, and it is never more important than in times of crisis,” Lieberman said. “The government may not needlessly restrict protest activity that is in compliance with important public health guidelines.”

(AP)



4 Responses

  1. A closer examination of these cases will undoubtedly find that most if not all of them were justified. If a person fights the police they are entitled to fight back. They’re entitled to use as much force as necessary — but no more — to do their jobs and to do them safely.

    As for the protesters, they do have the right to protest, just as we have the right to daven with a minyan, but only if standing 6 feet apart from each other. The first amendment doesn’t exempt them or us from the same neutral laws that apply equally to everyone. If De Blasio and Shea said there is no right to protest, they’re wrong; but the government can regulate the time, place, and manner of any protest, so long as it does so neutrally.

  2. The fact that those arrested are disproportionately non-white is simply a reflection of the well-known and indisputable fact that black people disproportionately defy police and the law, and therefore need to be arrested. What do people want, that white people should commit more crimes?!

  3. I agree with the blastio. Eve though right now i’m feeling very ;ets say un-partial to him. He has a point with “not basing his command on a handful of cases that went wrong or were mishandled”. Add to the fact that, “beeing punched while pinned down and unable to fight back” coulod be an issue, or it could be that even while pinned he was struggling to escape and therefore the punch was to subdue him. Yes, pain and sudden blows shake most normal yet violent people to submission. [not that it IS ok, its just that you have to know exactly what is going on…]

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