Albuquerque Journal

Ex-officer who beat Black man with gun goes on trial

- BY COLLEEN SLEVIN

CENTENNIAL, Colo. — A Colorado police officer used excessive and unreasonab­le force in the 2021 arrest of a Black man, pointing his gun at his head, repeatedly hitting the man with a gun and strangling him for 39 seconds, a prosecutor said Tuesday during opening statements in the ex-officer’s trial.

“You can see the fear on his face,” Jade Hoisington told jurors after playing body camera video showing the violent arrest of Kyle Vinson by John Haubert, who at the time was a police officer in the Denver suburb of Aurora. He also showed photos of the welts left on Vinson’s head.

Later, Vinson testified that he thought he might die after mistakenly believing that Haubert had accused him of having a gun, when Haubert in fact said he had one pointed at the back of the man’s head. Vinson looked down as body camera video of the arrest was played while he was on the witness stand, sitting just a few feet from Haubert.

Vinson, who is now serving a prison sentence in another case, said he had initially refused to come to court to testify against Haubert.

“I don’t like reliving it a lot. Usually I feel like people who are in this situation, with police brutality, are dead,” Vinson said. The judge did not allow him to continue along those lines after the defense objected.

Hoisington said Vinson, who had a warrant for his arrest in a domestic violence case at the time of his arrest, remained in a defensive stance during the encounter and put his hands up to try to protect himself.

Defense lawyer Kristen Frost presented a still photo made from video that Vinson acknowledg­ed showed three of his fingers on Haubert’s gun. But Vinson said he was not trying to grab it.

In questionin­g Vinson, Frost pointed out that he did not initially cooperate by getting on his stomach when Haubert ordered him to do so.

Frost also argued that Haubert did not strangle Vinson, putting his hand on Vinson’s neck to hold him down but not wrapping his fingers around it.

Haubert’s trial follows the conviction­s last year of an Aurora police officer and two paramedics from the city’s fire department in the 2019 death of Elijah McClain, who was put in a neck hold by police before being injected with the sedative ketamine by paramedics.

Vinson was taken to a hospital for the welts as well as a cut on his head that required six stitches, police said.

Haubert and another officer stopped Vinson and two other men after responding to a trespassin­g complaint at the parking lot of a shopping center. Initially things were relatively calm, with Haubert telling the men to take a seat on a curb in the shade and letting Vinson finishing smoking his cigarette, according to body camera video.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kyle Vinson, left, stands with his attorney Qusair Mohamedbha­i, on Aug. 4, 2021, in Denver. Aurora Police officer John Haubert is on trial over a violent arrest of Vinson.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Kyle Vinson, left, stands with his attorney Qusair Mohamedbha­i, on Aug. 4, 2021, in Denver. Aurora Police officer John Haubert is on trial over a violent arrest of Vinson.
 ?? ?? John Haubert
John Haubert

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