New York Daily News

‘I was target’

‘SNL’ alum on his own George Floyd moment

- BY NANCY DILLON

“Saturday Night Live” alum Jay Pharoah said it felt like “drowning” when police pulled guns on him and knelt on his neck in a case of mistaken identity last April.

Speaking to Taraji P. Henson for Monday’s episode of her Facebook Watch series “Peace of Mind,” the comedian recounted the scary confrontat­ion with Los Angeles police officers on a street in his Tarzana neighborho­od.

“I’ve never had handcuffs on me before in my life. And it feels like you’re drowning,” he said, describing the sensation of being forcibly restrained while facedown on the pavement.

“Somebody puts cuffs on you, and you can’t get up, and they’re on top of you. ... It does feel like you’re drowning. You can’t breathe. You’re underwater, and you’re fighting. It’s one of the worst feelings in the world,” he said.

Pharoah, 33, called it “a miracle” he happened to spot the first officer approachin­g with a gun off to his left.

“I couldn’t hear him. I had my headphones on. So if I was running through that situation at that time, I probably wouldn’t be here right now,” he said.

Pharoah said it was an utterly traumatizi­ng and humiliatin­g experience — one he shared with his parents in a difficult phone call afterward.

He said his mom “felt totally helpless” and his dad was “emotional” as well.

“My mom was just — I could hear it in her voice. I could hear the shakiness, the ‘What if?’ And that’s what she said, ‘We could have lost you today, had it been different.’ ”

Pharoah said it was the first time he personally experience­d such aggressive police tactics.

“I have to give it up for my peoples for just keeping me away from that,” he said of his parents.

“Both of them from the hood. But they tried to shelter me in a way where I don’t have to deal with that. And at the end of the day, I dealt with it. There was nothing that could be done,” he said

Pharoah first shared details of the police encounter in June, amid ongoing protests sparked by the death of George Floyd, a Black man who died after a white Minneapoli­s police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

He included surveillan­ce video from the scene in a short film produced by Careyon Production that he posted on Instagram.

Pharoah said he was completely caught-off-guard by the actions of the first officer because he didn’t do anything wrong.

“I see him coming with guns blazing. I see him say, ‘Get on the ground. Put your hands up like you’re an airplane.’ As he’s looking at me, I’m thinking that he’s making a mistake,” he said.

He soon realized he was the target.

“Four officers got their guns blazing. They tell me to get on the ground, spread my arms out. They put me in cuffs. The officer took his knee, put it on my neck,” he said.

The cops told him he fit the descriptio­n of a suspect in the area.

“I literally could have been George Floyd,” Pharoah said in a coda to the video where he spoke to the camera while lying on the ground with a knee on his neck in a recreation of the incident.

“We as a country can’t breathe anymore,” he said in the video.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Comedian Jay Pharoah (left, on ground, and below) says it felt like drowning when police pulled guns on him and one of them knelt on his neck in a case of mistaken identity.
Comedian Jay Pharoah (left, on ground, and below) says it felt like drowning when police pulled guns on him and one of them knelt on his neck in a case of mistaken identity.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States