The Daily Courier

Video raises questions about police arrest tactics

Fort Worth police investigat­e video of black man’s arrest

- By The Associated Press

FORT WORTH, Texas — The Fort Worth Police Department is investigat­ing a weekend arrest in which a white officer was caught on video kneeling on a black man’s back and punching him while a black officer kneed him.

In the 50-second video of Saturday’s arrest posted on Facebook by the Next Generation Action Network, which organizes demonstrat­ions against police abuse, two Fort Worth police officers can be seen restrainin­g Forrest Curry as he lies face-down in the street. A white officer kneels on Curry’s back and repeatedly punches him as he cries, “Why the f—- are you punching me? Why?” A black officer next to Curry knees him repeatedly in his side.

Police Chief Joel Fitzgerald said in a statement Sunday that the officers were responding to a call for backup from fire department personnel, who told the officers that Curry “appeared to be intoxicate­d and had attempted to assault them.”

It took three officers and one supervisor about five minutes to subdue Curry, Fitzgerald said.

Curry, 35, was booked into Tarrant County Correction­s Center on charges of resisting officers and evading arrest. Jail records showed that Curry was being held Monday on a $2,250 bond.

One of his attorneys, L. Chris Stewart of Atlanta, said Curry has a history of seizures and had one Saturday while walking that caused him to collapse in the street.

When Fort Worth emergency medical staff arrived in response to a call for help, Curry came to and, disoriente­d, took off running.

“It’s just sad that in a medical emergency, (police) couldn’t have been more patient or understand­ing,” Stewart said.

It is the latest in a string of confrontat­ions that have raised questions about the Fort Worth Police Department’s use of force policies.

Two lawsuits related to the use of force by city police officers were filed in December.

In one, Jeremi Rainwater, who is white, contends that an officer shot him in the back without cause and several other officers colluded to cover up the flawed police response. A grand jury that reviewed the officers’ behaviour in the 2015 shooting did not file any charges against them.

In the other, Jacqueline Craig, who is black, is suing over a December 2016 arrest in which a Fort Worth officer wrestled her and her teenage daughter to the ground. Those arrests were captured on cellphone video.

Charges against Craig and her daughter were dropped, and the officer served a 10-day suspension for violating department­al policies.

Last December, a Fort Worth police sergeant was fired for ordering a rookie officer to use a stun gun on a woman who had called for help during a domestic dispute.

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