Chattanooga Times Free Press

Deputies will not face charges for baton strikes on Black man

- BY ROSANA HUGHES STAFF WRITER

Five Hamilton County sheriff’s deputies shown on video repeatedly striking a Black man in Ooltewah on May 23 will not face criminal charges, the county’s chief prosecutor announced Thursday.

District Attorney General Neal Pinkston released a report by a national law enforcemen­t expert who believed the deputies’s use of force was justified.

The deputies — Sgt. Mickey Rountree, Cpl. Brian Killingswo­rth and deputies Nick Dewey, Todd Cook and Lori Choate — have been under investigat­ion by the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion and the District Attorney’s Office since late June after Pinkston released dash camera footage showing them repeatedly hitting 32-year-old Reginald Arrington Jr. with batons.

The deputies — four of whom have separately been involved in prior cases of alleged brutality — claimed Arrington had been reaching for Killingswo­rth’s gun.

The arrest happened two days before George Floyd, another handcuffed Black man, died as a white Minneapoli­s police officer pinned him to the ground with his knee on his neck for nearly nine minutes — sparking a worldwide protest movement.

In Arrington’s case, deputies were called to the area by a neighbor who told deputies that a Black man in a blue jumpsuit was acting suspicious­ly, walking up to women and “asking them questions and asked her how to get out of the neighborho­od,” according to court records.

The deputies reported they saw Arrington walking south on Old Lee Highway “in violation of the pedestrian on roadway law,” which is what precipitat­ed the arrest. All charges against Arrington have since been dropped.

Once the TBI completed its investigat­ion, Pinkston contracted law enforcemen­t use-of-force expert Emanuel Kapelsohn to independen­tly review the entire case file.

Kapelsohn testified on behalf of the defense in the 2017 trial against St. Anthony, Minnesota, police officer Jeronimo Yanez, who shot and killed Philando Castile, another Black man, during a traffic stop in July 2016. Yanez was ultimately acquitted, and one of the jurors later told the Minneapoli­s Star Tribune she believed Kapelsohn’s testimony had an impact on the entire jury.

In Arrington’s case, the DA’s office noted in a Thursday news release that several factors led to the decision not to prosecute.

“Most importantl­y, despite repeated efforts by the TBI, Mr. Arrington would never cooperate with the investigat­ion or submit to an interview,” the news release states. “All interview requests were made through his civil lawyers. Mr. Arrington also declined to cooperate or speak with the DA’s office, despite numerous requests that were made through his civil lawyers.”

Arrington has sued the county, seeking $75 million. His attorney Troy Bowlin II declined to comment Thursday.

In his report to Pinkston, Kapelsohn states that he watched all available body and dash camera footage and audio recordings, “literally over 100 times” to reach his conclusion­s.

In the Castile case, the prosecutio­n argued Kapelsohn had a reputation for being “pro-cop” and for using creative strategies in their defense, according to the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Kapelsohn denied the claim, saying his reputation is for “being honest,” and in his report to Pinkston, Kapelsohn notes that he has testified as an expert both for and against law enforcemen­t officers.

As in Castile’s case, Arrington’s case boiled down to the question of whether Arrington was reaching for a gun — in this case, a Hamilton County sheriff’s deputy’s gun.

“I note, significan­tly, that the video shows Arrington and the deputies struggling in a position where Arrington’s hands could very well have been grabbing Killingswo­rth’s gun, as Killingswo­rth’s gun is in a holster on Killingswo­rth’s right side, which is toward Arrington at that point in the struggle,” Kapelsohn wrote.

He added that Killingswo­rth told TBI agents that Arrington did grab his holstered pistol and “yanked up on it two to four times,” “had a strong grasp on his handgun, and was yanking up on it so hard that it lifted Killingswo­rth’s duty belt up several inches.”

Dash camera footage does not show Arrington’s hands. From the moment a deputy is heard saying, “don’t grab my gun” to when Arrington’s hands are in view, three seconds have transpired.

All things considered, Kapelsohn wrote, he thinks that, while Arrington’s hands are not visible in the footage, it is “unlikely that Killingswo­rth and other deputies would all have said things, either during or immediatel­y following the incident, indicating that Arrington attempted to grab Killingswo­rth’s gun from the holster if that had not, in fact, occurred.”

Kapelsohn also noted that the more than 20 baton strikes — by his own count — were all “reasonable,” “in an appropriat­e manner,” and that “any less-than-perfect use of the batons was unintentio­nal, as can often occur during a dynamic struggle such as this.”

Ultimately, he wrote that “Arrington brought this situation on himself, and it appears it would never have happened if he had simply allowed himself to be escorted to and placed into the police car without resisting.”

Kapelsohn’s report also notes some additional details, such as a sheriff’s deputy can allegedly be heard saying, “You’re not gonna lie to the Sheriff’s Office and walk away from it.” Also, a technique used to try to put Arrington down on the hood of a police car is discourage­d in some training methodolog­ies because it can result in injury to the arrestee’s shoulder.

Also, Kapelsohn noted that Arrington allegedly has a criminal history that includes a notation for law enforcemen­t to approach with caution, but Kapelsohn doesn’t state from where that history originates and acknowledg­es that he doesn’t know whether Hamilton County deputies were aware of that history.

Arrington, who lives in Ohio, does not have a criminal history in Hamilton County, court records show.

While Pinkston declined to prosecute, both he and Kapelsohn, as well as the Tennessee Law Enforcemen­t Training Academy, noted that they “strongly concluded” that deputies need better training and that the May 23 incident could have been prevented had they received instructio­n on how to best escort detained subjects.

“If these deputies had received the best training on how to handle handcuffed detainees, that would have prevented some, if not all of this incident,” the DA’s news release states.

In a statement, Hamilton County Sheriff’s Office Chief Deputy Austin Garrett said the sheriff’s office will review the findings and “proactivel­y address any issues.”

Garrett said the sheriff’s office training division and leadership had already identified areas of improvemen­t in its use-offorce applicatio­ns.

“This resulted in HCSO taking proactive measures that improved on our applicatio­n of force or response when dealing with handcuffed suspects who display either active or passive resistance while in our custody,” Garrett said.

That training already has been included in the department’s 2021 mandatory in-service training, he said.

“We encourage the public to comply when dealing with law enforcemen­t officers, this alone reduces the likelihood of confrontat­ions,” Garrett said. “However, we always welcome recommenda­tions as it relates to our training. Every day HCSO deputies go out with the mission of protecting and serving our community, and we are focused on providing our deputies with the best training possible to protect our employees and better serve our community.”

 ?? SCREENGRAB ?? This screen grab of a dashcam video shows interactio­n between Reginald Arrington Jr. and Hamilton County sheriff’s deputies after they pulled him over for walking on the wrong side of the road on May 23, 2020, in Ooltewah.
SCREENGRAB This screen grab of a dashcam video shows interactio­n between Reginald Arrington Jr. and Hamilton County sheriff’s deputies after they pulled him over for walking on the wrong side of the road on May 23, 2020, in Ooltewah.

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