Chattanooga Times Free Press

Attorney: Substance abuse a likely factor in police choking case

- BY ZACK PETERSON STAFF WRITER Contact staff writer Zack Peterson at zpeterson@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6347. Follow him on Twitter @zackpeters­on918.

A Chattanoog­a man who said East Ridge police officers choked him unconsciou­s and stunned him during a recent arrest has hired a criminal defense attorney well known for suing local law enforcemen­t agencies.

Robin Flores said Tuesday he is representi­ng Chris Penn in his criminal case in East Ridge City Court, where the 27-year-old is accused of misusing 911 and then assaulting two police officers around 4 a.m. on Oct. 21. Flores said a substance abuse disorder “may have been the driving force” behind his client’s response to officers that night. Flores previously described the officers’ reactions, though, as excessive and said he is continuing to investigat­e the incident.

“It looks like it’s going to be a diminished capacity kind of defense,” Flores said Tuesday. “The man was not in his right mind and that’s, in essence, it. We suspect that medical proof will indicate that … substance abuse disorder may have been the driving force behind his force to officers.”

Assistant Police Chief Stan Allen, who is running the department while Chief J.R. Reed is being investigat­ed for policy violations, previously described the choking and stunning as “necessary force” and said his officers followed policy and weren’t discipline­d.

The Times Free Press previously reported Penn called 911 on himself around 4 a.m. on Oct. 21, said he’d taken pills and claimed the mother of one of his children had let strangers into a home who wanted to kill him. Five officers came to the 6100 block of Welworth Avenue, separated Penn from his child, put him in handcuffs and led him to a patrol car outside. After Penn tried to run, kicking at and thrashing at them, one officer put a Taser to his groin for five seconds and another jerked him completely off the ground in what experts have described as an armbar choke hold across his windpipe.

Penn appeared to struggle breathing before passing out in body camera footage the Times Free Press obtained through a records request. Officers then loaded him into a patrol car and drove him to the hospital, less than a half mile away.

In previous interviews, Penn said he couldn’t recall what happened that night, admitted to being under the influence but said it didn’t excuse the excessive force used on him. Though law enforcemen­t advocates say officers need a quick way to stop people who are violent or resisting, medical experts caution choke holds and other neck restraints are banned in many department­s because they’re potentiall­y lethal and can cause brain damage if a person’s breathing is cut off for too long.

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