Houston Chronicle

N.C. officer charged after video shows beating of pedestrian

- By Jonathan Drew

RALEIGH, N.C. — A white police officer shown on video beating a black pedestrian has been charged with felony assault in a North Carolina case that sparked outrage over use of excessive force.

The case against former Asheville police officer Christophe­r Hickman stems from an August 2017 encounter that became public only last week after a leaked body camera video showed Hickman subduing and punching the pedestrian, who was accused of jaywalking.

The violent encounter happened shortly after Asheville implemente­d rules against excessive force, demonstrat­ing how even a well-meaning policy can be limited by the officers carrying it out. The delay in making the footage public also shows that body camera technology being adopted across the country can’t always guarantee the level of transparen­cy many have hoped for.

“We need to be very cognizant of how difficult police supervisio­n actually is. It’s difficult enough that we can’t just throw a piece of technology at it and expect to substantia­lly change police supervisio­n,” said Seth Stoughton, who teaches law at the University of South Carolina.

Hickman, 31, was arrested late Thursday on a felony charge of assault by strangulat­ion, as well as misdemeano­r counts of assault and communicat­ing threats, according to the prosecutor. A phone listing for Hickman, who resigned in January, had a full inbox that wouldn’t take messages.

The Aug. 25 encounter came months after the city implemente­d the use-of-force policy that included training on de-escalating tense situations. The policy was drafted in the aftermath of a white officer killing an armed black man after a high speed chase.

Despite the policy, Hickman was shown on video published last week by The Citizen-Times subduing Johnnie Jermaine Rush, then punching and shocking him with a stun gun. Rush was stopped on a dark street because officers accused him of crossing outside a crosswalk near a minor league ballpark and cluster of breweries popular with tourists.

An arrest warrant for Hickman said Rush, 33, suffered head abrasions and swelling and that he lost consciousn­ess when Hickman pressed his arm on his throat.

James Lee, a black minister and member of the Racial Justice Coalition, said the episode erodes trust in a community that hoped the use-of-force policy would bring change.

“What this has done is pause that level of trust,” Lee said.

Still, Lee said Hickman is being held accountabl­e, and he believes Police Chief Tammy Hooper should stay in her job.

“Hopefully she’ll continue to learn from this,” he said.

Complicati­ng transparen­cy efforts, state law generally requires a judge to sign off on public release of body camera video. City officials are petitionin­g a judge to make more footage public.

Asheville’s City Council released a statement saying that members were “furious” that they weren’t told about the case until the video surfaced. The panel now wants a third-party audit for racial bias among the police serving a city of nearly 90,000 with a population that’s about 82 percent white and 12 percent black.

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