Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Bucks’ Brown files lawsuit

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Milwaukee Bucks guard Sterling Brown sued the city of Milwaukee and its police department Tuesday, saying officers’ use of a stun gun during his arrest for a parking violation constitute­s excessive force and that they targeted him because he is black. Brown’s attorney Mark Thomsen filed the lawsuit in federal court, accusing police of “discrimina­ting against Mr. Brown on the basis of his race.” The lawsuit alleges officers involved in his arrest used their incident report to try to reframe what happened to give the impression Brown was resisted and obstructed them. Brown had been talking with officers while waiting for a citation for illegally parking in a disabled spot outside a Walgreens at about 2 a.m. Central on Jan. 26, when officers took him down because he didn’t immediatel­y remove his hands from his pockets as ordered. An officer yells: “Taser! Taser! Taser!” Brown had been cooperativ­e with officers and never appeared to threaten police before or during his arrest, according to police body-camera videos. Some officers suspected Brown might have a firearm because they saw paper targets with holes in the back seat of his car, according to the lawsuit. Brown told officers he didn’t have a gun when they asked him, but they didn’t give him “any real opportunit­y to comply” to their command that he take his hands out of his pockets, the lawsuit said. Mayor Tom Barrett said in a statement he hopes something good comes from the lawsuit. Police Chief Alfonso Morales has not responded to an Associated Press request for comment. Morales apologized to Brown last month when body-camera video of the arrest was released. Brown wasn’t charged and three officers were discipline­d, with suspension­s ranging from two to 15 days. Eight other officers were ordered to undergo remedial training in profession­al communicat­ions.

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