Houston Chronicle

Officer taped restrainin­g teen amputee

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TUCSON, Ariz. — Arizona prosecutor­s dropped disorderly conduct charges against a 15-year-old quadruple amputee after viewing video of a sheriff ’s deputy wrestling him to the floor in a group home, the teen’s attorney said Friday.

Samuel Jurgena, a Pima County public defender, said his client went public with cellphone video of the September incident in Tucson to prompt changes in police treatment of youths in group homes.

“I think everyone feels in my office this cop should not be out here with a badge and a gun if this is how he’s treating kids in group homes,” Jurgena said.

The Associated Press is withholdin­g the teen’s name because of his age.

KOLD-TV reported Thursday night that the Pima County Attorney’s Office said it decided to drop the charges immediatel­y after seeing the video, which was shot by another resident. A worker had called 911 after the 15-yearold allegedly kicked a trash can over and made a verbal threat, according to authoritie­s.

The start of the eightminut­e video shows the deputy tussling on the kitchen floor with the boy, who is screaming and cursing. The deputy then uses his body to pin the teen on his side. After about two minutes, the officer gets up. He then talks to the teen, telling him to “shut the hell up.”

The boy did not suffer any physical injuries. But Jurgena said the treatment he endured was neverthele­ss appalling.

“He does not have the ability to fight back in a way like a normal person would,” Jurgena said.

Marissa Hernandez, a Pima County Sheriff ’s Department spokeswoma­n, said Friday that the agency is conducting an internal investigat­ion. She did not identify the deputy in the video or say if his duties would change during the course of the investigat­ion.

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