The Star Malaysia

Nurse reaches settlement over rough arrest

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SALT LAKE CITY: A Utah nurse who was arrested for refusing to let a police officer draw blood from an unconsciou­s patient settled with Salt Lake City and the university that runs the hospital for US$500,000 (RM 2.11mil).

Nurse Alex Wubbels and her lawyer, Karra Porter, announced the move nearly two months after they released police body-camera video showing Detective Jeff Payne handcuffin­g Wubbels. The footage drew widespread attention online amid the national debate about police use of force.

The settlement covers all possible defendants in a lawsuit, including individual police officers, university police and hospital security guards. The payout will be divided among the city and the University of Utah.

Wubbels plans to use part of the money to fund legal help for others trying to get similar body-camera video. She said that in cases like hers, video is essential to being heard and believed.

“We all deserve to know the truth, and the truth comes when you see the actual raw footage, and that’s what happened in my case,” she said. “No matter how truthful I was in telling my story, it was nothing compared to what people saw and the visceral reaction people experience­d when watching the footage of the experience I went through.”

She said she also plans to give a portion of the US$500,000 to a nurse’s union and help lead a campaign to stop physical and verbal abuse of nurses on the job.

University of Utah hospital officials said in a statement they support Wubbels and have changed their procedures and training on how police and healthcare workers interact to ensure nothing similar happens again.

Wubbels was following hospital policy when she told Payne he needed a warrant or the consent of the patient to draw blood after a July 26 car crash. The patient was not under arrest or suspected of wrongdoing.

Payne had neither. He eventually dragged Wubbels outside and hand- cuffed her as she screamed that she had done nothing wrong.

She was released without being charged but has said the incident left her feeling terrified and bullied.

In a call for changes, Wubbels and her lawyer released the video they had obtained through a public records request.

Salt Lake City Police Chief Mike Brown has since apologised and fired Payne after an internal investigat­ion found he violated department policies.

Brown said in a disciplina­ry letter that he was “deeply troubled” by Payne’s conduct, which he said brought “significan­t disrepute” on the department.

Payne is appealing that decision, saying the firing was an unfair reaction to the negative publicity.

 ??  ?? Unfair treatment: Wubbels displaying video frame grabs from Salt Lake City Police Department body cams of herself being taken into custody, during an interview in Salt Lake City.
Unfair treatment: Wubbels displaying video frame grabs from Salt Lake City Police Department body cams of herself being taken into custody, during an interview in Salt Lake City.

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