Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Charges dropped against Black man stunned by cop

- NASHVILLE, TENN. (AP) »

A Black DoorDash driver no longer faces charges in a traffic stop for speeding in which a police officer shot him with a stun gun, an exchange the man caught on video as he declined to leave his car and requested a police supervisor.

A judge this week dismissed the case against Delane Gordon, according to Hamilton County district attorney’s office spokespers­on Bruce Garner. Gordon had been charged with speeding, disorderly conduct and resisting arrest in the March 10 stop while delivering food in Collegedal­e, about 20 miles (32 kilometers) east of Chattanoog­a.

The Collegedal­e Police Department last month cleared Evan Driskill, the white officer, of wrongdoing in the encounter and sharply criticized prosecutor­s over their handling of the case.

The police department said the prosecutor’s office should not have sought to drop the charges against Gordon and was wrong to halt the outside probe it asked the county sheriff’s office to perform and hand it off to the U.S. Department of Justice for further possible investigat­ion.

Police Chief Jack Sapp said last month that his officers have “had to endure illegitima­te claims of racism and threats of violence.” He added that he supports deescalati­on when “practical” but argued that “in this specific event only one person was acting unlawfully and that was Mr. Gordon.”

Gordon’s attorney, Ryan Wheeler, said last month that “the only investigat­ion that matters in this case was the one conducted by the Hamilton County DA’s office, which cleared my client,” calling the police probe “self-serving.”

After clearing the officer of an excessive force claim, police made his body camera recording public about a month and a half after Gordon’s legal team released his cellphone video. Law enforcemen­t agencies had declined to release the body camera video while the investigat­ion was ongoing. The internal investigat­ion focused on the numerous times Driskill ordered Gordon out of the car and told him to produce identifica­tion.

Gordon’s cellphone video begins with the officer pointing the stun gun at Gordon, who is holding his driver’s license and sitting in the car. The officer yells “Get out!” multiple times at Gordon, who describes for viewers that the officer “pulled me over for a traffic stop and he’s going to tase me. You can’t do that, officer, because I called for your supervisor. I have my license.”

The officer says, “You refused to give your informatio­n. I told you to get out of the car. Now you’re resisting. Get out!” Gordon says he feels uncomforta­ble and adds, “Please get your supervisor.” The officer responds, “I don’t give a (expletive) what you feel like. I said get out.” The officer grabs the man and tries to yank him out of the car, as Gordon says “please don’t hurt me” and asks why he is doing this.

The officer releases Gordon, and as Gordon says the officer’s actions are “not lawful,” the officer fires the stun gun, striking Gordon.

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