Rome News-Tribune

Officer denies wrongdoing in violent takedown of wrong man

- By Russ Bynum

SAVANNAH — A white police officer who slammed a Black man to the ground and broke his wrist denies wrongdoing, saying he mistakenly believed the man had an outstandin­g arrest warrant and used force because the man resisted, the officer’s attorneys said in a legal filing.

Antonio Arnelo Smith filed suit in federal court in June against Valdosta police Lt. Billy Wheeler, as well as other officers and city officials, saying they used excessive force and violated his civil rights.

The lawsuit was filed amid a national outcry over police brutality against people of color, sparked by the May 25 killing of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

Police body camera video of the Feb. 8 encounter in Valdosta, near the GeorgiaFlo­rida state line, shows Smith handing his driver’s license to a Black officer and talking cooperativ­ely when Wheeler walks up behind him, wraps him in a bear hug and slams him face-first to the ground.

“Oh my God, you broke my wrist!” Smith, 46, screams as two more white officers arrive and handcuff him on the ground. When an officer tells Smith he’s being arrested on an outstandin­g warrant, he’s immediatel­y corrected by the first officer: They’ve got the wrong man.

The officers let Smith go and he declined to wait for an ambulance, walking away clutching his wrist.

Wheeler’s actions “were objectivel­y reasonable” and did not deprive Smith of any constituti­onal rights, attorneys James Thagard and Matthew Lawrence said in a court filing Tuesday.

They also noted, as did lawyers for Valdosta’s mayor and police chief in a separate legal filing, that no disciplina­ry action was taken against Wheeler. In fact, his attorneys said, the police department promoted Wheeler from sergeant to lieutenant at some point after Smith’s injury.

According to an incident report, Valdosta police encountere­d Smith while responding to a report that a man was harassing customers and asking for money outside a drug store. Officers simultaneo­usly found two suspects nearby who fit the descriptio­n. Officers questionin­g one of the men learned he had an outstandin­g arrest warrant. The other was Smith.

Body camera video shows Smith talking cooperativ­ely with one of the officers when Wheeler walks up silently behind Smith, grabs his right wrist and pins both of his arms to his sides in a bear hug. Wheeler orders Smith to put his pinned hands behind his back, then slams Smith to the ground a few seconds later.

 ?? Valdosta Police via AP ?? In this still image from body camera video released by the Valdosta police, Antonio Arnelo Smith is slammed face-first to the ground by a Valdosta police sergeant.
Valdosta Police via AP In this still image from body camera video released by the Valdosta police, Antonio Arnelo Smith is slammed face-first to the ground by a Valdosta police sergeant.

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