The Standard (St. Catharines)

N.Y.C. officer charged with assault for shove

Viral video shows woman being violently pushed to the ground at protest

- MICHAEL R. SISAK AND JIM MUSTIAN

NEW YORK—A New York City police officer caught on video violently shoving a woman to the ground during a Brooklyn protest over George Floyd’s death was charged Tuesday with assault.

Officer Vincent D’andraia, 28, was released on his own recognizan­ce after a video arraignmen­t and ordered to stay away from protester Dounya Zayer, who was hospitaliz­ed after hitting her head on the pavement in the May 29 altercatio­n. She said she suffered a concussion and a seizure.

D’andraia is also charged with criminal mischief, harassment and menacing. His lawyer pleaded not guilty on his behalf. D’andraia did not say anything as he appeared on video from behind bars in a suit and protective face mask because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. He is due back in court in October.

District Attorney Eric Gonzalez said in a statement announcing the charges that he “cannot tolerate the use of excessive force” against anyone exercising their constituti­onal right to protest, adding he was “deeply troubled by this unnecessar­y assault.”

The police department suspended D’andraia last week without pay. The officer, who had been assigned to Brooklyn’s 73rd Precinct, was also stripped of his weapons at that time, his lawyer, Stephen Worth said.

D’andraia is the first New York City police officer to face criminal charges stemming from alleged misconduct exhibited during the days of unrest that have roiled the city in the wake of Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s and police brutality against people of colour.

A police officer was suspended without pay last week for pulling down a protester’s face mask and pepper spraying him in a separate incident a day after D’andraia’s shove. Another officer was placed on modified duty Tuesday for alleging opening the door of an unmarked police car into a protester, Commission­er Dermot Shea said.

The state’s attorney general and the city’s police watchdog agency are investigat­ing the police response to the protests.

The head of D’andraia’s union, the Police Benevolent Associatio­n, said the mayor and police leaders were “sacrificin­g cops to save their own skin” by sending officers out to protests with “no support and no clear plan.”

“They should be the ones facing this mob-rule justice,” union president Pat Lynch said in a statement. “We will say it again: New York City police officers have been abandoned by our leadership. We are utterly alone in our efforts to protect our city.”

Bystander video of D’andraia pushing the woman was viewed millions of times on Twitter and generated outrage among protesters and elected officials.

 ??  ?? A video grab shows New York police officer Vincent D'andraia shoving protester Dounya Zayer on May 29.
A video grab shows New York police officer Vincent D'andraia shoving protester Dounya Zayer on May 29.

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