Imperial Valley Press

Firings of o cers after students pulled from car reversed

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ATLANTA (AP) — Video of Atlanta police o cers using Tasers and pulling two college students from a car during a large protest last year against police brutality and racial injustice sparked national outrage, and two of the o cers were immediatel­y fired. This week their dismissals were overturned.

The Civil Service Board found the city did not follow its own personnel procedures, which resulted in the officers being deprived of due process because they were not given proper notificati­on or adequate opportunit­y to respond. The board, which is made up of five residents recommende­d by the mayor and confirmed by the city council, ordered Monday that the dismissals of Ivory Streeter and Mark Gardner be revoked.

O cers confronted Messiah Young and Taniyah Pilgrim, rising seniors at historical­ly Black colleges in Atlanta, as they were stuck in tra c after a curfew declared by the mayor May 30 during protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd in Minnesota.

Police body camera footage shows o cers shouting at the couple, firing Tasers at them and dragging them from the car. Throughout the confrontat­ion, the pair can be heard screaming and asking what they did wrong.

Video of the confrontat­ion was shared widely online and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and then-Police Chief Erika Shields decided the two o cers had used excessive force and must be fired immediatel­y.

Streeter and Gardner each received a notice of proposed adverse action May 31 indicating dismissal effective the following day and citing “Maltreatme­nt or Unnecessar­y Force.” That same day, they were served notices of final adverse action e ective the next day.

Generally, an employee should be given 10 days between the notice of proposed adverse action, such as a firing, and its e ective date, the Civil Service Board said in its order. An adverse action can become e ective immediatel­y in an emergency situation, but the board found the city did not follow its own guidelines for an emergency situation.

Shields, who stepped down as police chief about two weeks after the incident, told the board extraordin­ary circumstan­ces resulted in the decision to fire the two longtime o cers. City o cials feared the incident would increase outrage against police.

“The circumstan­ces were exceptiona­l,” Shields testified according to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. “We did, I did, what I had to do to make sure the city was stabilized.”

Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms on Tuesday noted that the Civil Service Board did not say the o cers’ conduct was lawful.

“(G)iven the unrest across our city and nation at the time, and the disturbing video footage before us, I still believe that the right decision was made,” she said in an emailed statement.

Rev. James Woodall, state president of the Georgia NAACP, said the mayor didn’t do enough to work with community leaders to address an unfolding crisis in the city.

“Unfortunat­ely we are seeing the continued failure of Atlanta’s Mayor and the newly appointed DNC Vice Chair Keisha Lance Bottoms to address the systematic failures of extra judicial violence against Black Atlantans,” he wrote in a text message Tuesday.

The two o cers still face criminal charges that the Fulton County district attorney at the time, Paul Howard, announced just a couple of days after the incident.

Streeter was charged with aggravated assault for using a Taser against Young and with pointing a gun at him, arrest warrants say. Gardner was charged with aggravated assault for using a Taser against Pilgrim, a warrant says. Four other o cers were also charged.

In an email to the department after Howard’s announceme­nt, Shields defended the firing of the o cers but questioned the timing and appropriat­eness of the charges.

Newly elected Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who ousted Howard, asked Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr last week to assign the case to another prosecutor, saying actions by Howard made it inappropri­ate for her o ce to pursue the case. It will be up to a new prosecutor to decide whether to proceed with the charges.

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