South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

3 Florida cops face felony charges in rough arrests

Controvers­ial July 26 incident involved 2 Black men at a South Beach hotel

- ScratchCar.com

MIAMI — Three Miami Beach police officers are now facing felony charges related to the rough arrests of two Black men at a South Beach hotel, prosecutor­s said Thursday.

The Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office had originally charged five officers in August with misdemeano­r battery charges.

On Thursday, State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle announced the upgraded charges for Officer Kevin Perez and Sgt. Jose Perez, who are now charged with third-degree felony battery, and Officer Javier Serrano, who is now charged with official misconduct, which is also a third-degree felony.

In addition, Serrano and officers Robert Sabater and David Rivas still face misdemeano­r battery charges, officials said.

Charges will be brought before a judge next week.

“All aspects of this July

26th police incident are taken very seriously by my prosecutor­s,” Rundle said in the news release. “The investigat­ion has been and will be as thorough and complete as possible since our entire community has been shocked and offended by what we have seen.”

Surveillan­ce video from the incident shows an officer chase Dalonta Crudup,

24, into the lobby of the Royal Palm Hotel in South Beach in the early morning hours of July 26. The officer orders Crudup onto the ground at gunpoint, and Crudup complies.

Moments later, more than a dozen other officers run into the lobby and surround Crudup, who can be seen on the ground with his hands behind his back. Body-camera footage shows officers kick a handcuffed Crudup multiple times.

Previously, Fernandez Rundle said the video also shows Khalid Vaughn, 28, using a cellphone to record Crudup’s arrest from about

12 feet away. The footage shows Vaughn backing away at the instructio­n of an officer when Sabater tackles Vaughn to the floor and repeatedly punches him.

Prosecutor­s said Rivas and Serrano also struck Vaughn.

Crudup didn’t sign a waiver that allowed prosecutor­s to review his medical records until Aug.

25, so they weren’t able to view documents regarding his injuries until Sept.

13. Fernandez Rundle said “a deeper understand­ing of the actual injuries was necessary to file these felony battery charges.”

Crudup was initially charged with battery and aggravated assault on a law-enforcemen­t officer. The charges were later reduced, and he is now awaiting trial on counts of fleeing and eluding police and reckless driving.

Charges against Vaughn of resisting an arrest with violence and impeding a police investigat­ion have been dropped.

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