Los Angeles Times

Sheriff opens investigat­ion of violent arrest

Video shows a deputy throwing a woman to the ground outside a store in Lancaster.

- By Gabriel San Román

Cellphone video of a deputy throwing a woman to the ground by her neck during an incident in Lancaster last month has prompted an investigat­ion by the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department.

On June 24, Lancaster sheriff ’s station deputies responded to a reported “inprogress robbery” at a WinCo Foods grocery store when they encountere­d a man and woman who matched the descriptio­n of the suspects given by store security guards on the 911 call.

Deputies detained the man in the parking lot when the woman began recording the incident with her cellphone.

A witness also captured the encounter from the parking lot.

“You can’t touch me,” the woman can be heard telling the deputy off camera.

Footage from the witness’ cellphone showed the deputy throwing the woman to the ground before cuffing her soon after.

Authoritie­s learned of the video after the arrests.

The department called the footage “disturbing” in a news release announcing the investigat­ion late Monday.

“Sheriff [Robert] Luna has made it clear that he expects Department personnel to treat all members of the public with dignity and respect, and that personnel who do not uphold our training standards will be held accountabl­e,” the department said.

Both deputies who responded to the robbery call have been taken off field duty pending review, according to the department.

Citing transparen­cy concerns, the department released body-worn camera footage from the deputies but cautioned that additional facts may come to light that were not captured on video.

One video depicted a deputy approachin­g the woman who was suspected of robbery and reaching for her phone as she was filming a few feet away from where the man was being handcuffed.

After she was forced to the ground, the deputy pepper-sprayed and handcuffed her.

“All you had to do was listen,” he later told the woman.

“I didn’t do anything,” she replied.

The woman said the deputy was angry at her because she filmed the encounter and claimed to have already streamed the footage on YouTube Live.

The man and woman were cited and released, but a department spokespers­on did not disclose to The Times what they were cited for.

The investigat­ion will determine whether the use of force was reasonable and appropriat­e.

In the meantime, a protest is being organized at the grocery store Wednesday at 5 p.m. by several groups, including the Community Action League.

Chief among the demands is the terminatio­n of the deputy who forced the woman to the ground.

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