Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2 officers charged over arrests during May protest in Indianapol­is

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INDIANAPOL­IS — A grand jury indicted two Indianapol­is police officers on battery and other charges after an investigat­ion into allegation­s that they used excessive force while arresting demonstrat­ors at a May protest over the death of George Floyd, a prosecutor announced Wednesday.

Johnathan Horlock, a fiveyear veteran with the Indianapol­is Metropolit­an Police Department, faces three counts of battery and one count each of official misconduct, perjury and obstructio­n. Nathanial Schauwecke­r, who has been with the department for eight years, faces four counts of battery and two counts of official misconduct.

“The question here is whether the officers’ conduct was reasonable or not,” Marion County prosecutor Ryan Mears said at a news conference. “You can’t say, ‘Hey, my training told me to do this,’ if that conduct turns out to be unconstitu­tional, or excessive.”

Two women, Ivore Westfield and Rachel Harding, both of Marion County, are named as victims. They filed a federal lawsuit in June after video was released of officers using batons and pepper balls to subdue them during their May 31 arrests in downtown Indianapol­is.

Video of the arrest, recorded by WISH-TV, shows Westfield, who is Black, being held from behind by a white officer, escaping his grasp and then being surrounded by several other officers. There were audible pops and several clouds of spray near Westfield, which the lawsuit contends were caused by detonated pepper balls. Two officers struck her with batons until she fell to the ground, and she was then pinned facedown by a baton at the back of her neck.

Harding, who is white, could be seen and heard in the video shouting, “Why her? Why her?” Another officer then rushed Harding and shoved her to the ground, where officers subdued her.

Neither woman was charged with any crime.

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