The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Photograph­er’s suit alleges he was unjustly detained

The lawsuit names GSU police officers and a campus contractor.

- By Rosie Manins rosie.manins@ajc.com

A freelance photograph­er arrested while on assignment for The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on claims in a recently filed lawsuit that Georgia State University police officers unjustly detained him, yanked his hair while he was handcuffed and persuaded campus constructi­on workers to falsely accuse him of participat­ing in a protest against Atlanta’s public safety training center.

Benjamin Hendren has brought an unlawful seizure lawsuit against five GSU officers as well as Brasfield & Gorrie, one of the contractor­s hired to work on training center constructi­on, and two of its workers.

Hendren said he was wrongfully detained on July 29, 2022, while photograph­ing the arrests of training center protesters near a Brasfield & Gorrie site housing the GSU Convocatio­n Center.

He said he never entered the campus constructi­on site that protesters damaged, but that the GSU officers who detained him manufactur­ed a lie to justify doing so.

The lawsuit, filed July 1 in the federal trial court in Atlanta, alleges that the officers encouraged two Brasfield & Gorrie employees to falsely state that Hendren had committed criminal offenses at the constructi­on site.

“Each of (the GSU officers) knew that Hendren had not been at the constructi­on site,” the complaint states. “(The officers), along with Atlanta Police Department officers, continued to search for any justificat­ion to hold Hendren. But there was no justificat­ion whatsoever.”

Hendren was detained at a GSU precinct for about seven hours before being released without charge, the lawsuit states.

GSU did not immediatel­y respond to questions about the case. Brasfield & Gorrie said it doesn’t comment on pending litigation. The Atlanta Police Department is not a party to the case.

Hendren was lawfully parked in the Summerhill neighborho­od, about half a mile from the campus constructi­on site, when he began to photograph people being arrested, the lawsuit states.

Hendren did not commit a crime or interfere in any way and law enforcemen­t did not ask him to move from the public sidewalk from which he was photograph­ing, it states. The GSU officers “approached Hendren as he was taking photograph­s, put him in handcuffs, and told him to sit on the curb” solely because they didn’t like being photograph­ed, the lawsuit states.

Officers ignored offers to view Hendren’s media credential­s or speak with an AJC editor even though Hendren repeatedly told them he was not part of the protest group but was there as a journalist, it states.

In addition, the lawsuit says, GSU officers tried to humiliate Hendren by taking photograph­s of him while he was handcuffed.

“When Hendren tilted his head down to avoid being photograph­ed, (the officers) grabbed his hair and yanked his head up so he could be photograph­ed against his will,” the lawsuit states.

The lawsuit also said one of the GSU officers falsely claimed to have seen Hendren at the campus constructi­on site, then encouraged Brasfield & Gorrie workers to back up that allegation.

A GSU officer wrote a report stating that Hendren was arrested because the Brasfield & Gorrie workers had identified him as a protester inside the constructi­on site, the lawsuit states.

Hendren’s claims against the defendants include unlawful seizure, false imprisonme­nt, retaliatio­n and negligence. He wants unspecifie­d damages and attorney fees.

Hendren’s case is one of several filed in response to arrests associated with protests against Atlanta’s public safety training center.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/AJC 2022 ?? Brasfield & Gorrie, a contractor hired to build Atlanta’s public safety training center, is being sued alongside officers of the Georgia State University Police Department after a freelance photograph­er was arrested while capturing images associated with a protest against the project in July 2022.
JOHN SPINK/AJC 2022 Brasfield & Gorrie, a contractor hired to build Atlanta’s public safety training center, is being sued alongside officers of the Georgia State University Police Department after a freelance photograph­er was arrested while capturing images associated with a protest against the project in July 2022.

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