The Mercury News

DA dismisses case against Floyd protester injured by SJPD.

Video showed officers hitting San Jose man with baton and swarming him

- By Robert Salonga rsalonga@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> A protester who was hit in the neck with a police baton, then swarmed by officers — causing injuries including a shattered knee — will not face charges that he assaulted the officers during the chaotic first day of George Floyd protests in late May.

Attorneys representi­ng 36-yearold San Jose resident David Baca said they got word from the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office that it will not charge him in the violent May 29 clash. The incident drew national media attention due largely to Associated Press photograph­er Ben Margot’s up- close image of the officer’s baton making contact with Baca’s neck — later broadcast on “The Daily Show with Trevor Noah” — and overhead footage from news helicopter­s.

The district attorney’s office confirmed to this news organizati­on its decision not to file against Baca, but declined to offer specific comment other than stating there was insufficie­nt evidence for criminal charges. San Jose police declined to comment on the decision not to prosecute Baca.

One of Baca’s attorneys, Dan Mayfield, thanked prosecutor­s for “their careful review and considerat­ion of this case,” and said he and attorney Jerry Fong are exploring potential civil litigation against the city and police de

partment.

“I think they came to the conclusion they could not prove it beyond the reasonable doubt, and they did the right thing,” Mayfield said. “This certainly wouldn’t happen anywhere. We were lucky there was a helicopter

directly overhead. We were lucky the events occurred on one of those lines they painted on the street, so we could get a very clear estimate for how far away from police David was.”

The encounter at Seventh and Santa Clara streets was further detailed in police body- camera footage released in September that showed Baca walking up to a police skirmish line with his cell phone held up, looking to record an officer he asserted was being racist by targeting protesters of color with rubber bullets, including himself. An after-action report later released by police to the city council alleged that Baca “suddenly advanced” on one of the officers after an unlawful dispersal order had been announced.

But Mayfield said Baca was several feet away when an officer “clearly took two steps forward” and pushed his wooden baton into Baca’s Adam’s apple. The accumulate­d footage shows Baca grabbing at the baton, which his wife contends was out of protective instinct, before other officers quickly took him to the ground to subdue him. During the struggle, Baca can be heard yelling “I can’t breathe” while pinned down.

“It clearly showed that David was not a threat and that he got no closer than five feet,” Mayfield said.

Mayfield added that six months after emergency surgery to repair his knee, Baca “still cannot walk without pain and he is still disabled from this beating.”

The police department has been under heavy scrutiny for what many city leaders, civil rights groups and residents described as heavy-handed tactics used against demonstrat­ors over several days in the wake of Floyd’s killing by Minneapoli­s police on Memorial Day.

SJPD ha s since restricted its use of rubber bullets and similar armaments for crowd control. After a months-long backand-forth with the city, the department agreed to expedite the release of police-recorded video footage of high- profile incidents — starting with the Floyd demonstrat­ions — to increase public transparen­cy.

While lawsuits have been burgeoning, scores of demonstrat­ors have not received recompense for serious injuries they suffered at the hands of police, largely from rubber and foam rounds and tear gas. Among those injured was a former police bias trainer and community activist who was shot in the groin while trying to de- escalate tensions between officers and protesters.

Relatedly, police have not said publicly whether Officer Jared Yuen, who drew nationwide infamy after being caught on video aggressive­ly antagonizi­ng protesters, has faced any discipline. Police confirmed in the after-action report that he was not on any street enforcemen­t duty.

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 ?? BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? David Baca is hit with a police baton before he was taken to the ground during the first day of George Floyd protests in downtown San Jose on May 29.
BEN MARGOT — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS David Baca is hit with a police baton before he was taken to the ground during the first day of George Floyd protests in downtown San Jose on May 29.

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