The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2 more officers fired over tasing incident

Other fired officers file suit against APD chief and Bottoms.

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

Atlanta police officers Lonnie Hood and Armond Jones were fired Wednesday following their involvemen­t in the tasings of two college students during recent protests.

Atlanta Police Department spokesman Sgt. John Chaffee said the investigat­ion into the May 30 incident involving 22-yearold Messiah Young and his 20-year-old girlfriend, Taniyah Pilgrim, remains open and the agency would have no further comment.

Former officers Ivory Streeter and Mark Gardner were fired the day after their confrontat­ion with the students and on Monday filed a lawsuit against Atlanta police Chief Erika Shields and Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, claiming they were dismissed without a proper investigat­ion.

Fulton County District

Attorney Paul Howard has announced criminal charges against Streeter, Gardner, Hood, Jones and two other officers.

Jones was charged with aggravated battery and pointing or aiming a gun, while Hood is accused of two counts of aggravated assault and one count of simple battery.

The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on has reached out to the Atlanta Police Union for comment.

Police body camera video showed an officer trying to remove Young, a Morehouse College senior, from a vehicle while it was stopped in the middle of Centennial Olympic Park Drive amid a throng of protesters. Young and Pilgrim, a Spelman College psychology major, were tased and dragged from their vehicle with no apparent warning. They have said they were out on a date that night and just looking for a place to have dinner, unaware they were out past the city’s curfew, since rescinded, that was in place at the time.

In a statement, Chris Stewart, Mawuli Davis and Justin Miller, attorneys for the students, praised the mayor for “making every effort to right a wrong that was obvious to all when watching the officers’ body cameras.”

“We can’t continue to allow members of law enforcemen­t to recklessly abuse the citizens they are sworn to protect,” the statement read.

‘We can’t continue to allow members of law enforcemen­t to recklessly abuse the citizens they are sworn to protect.’ Statement from Chris Stewart, Mawuli Davis and Justin Miller attorneys for the students

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