WATCH: Video of Black Man’s Arrest Spurs Outrage, NYPD Probe

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In this image made from video, New York City police officers forcefully arrest 20-year-old Fitzroy Gayle in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Wednesday, March 4, 2020. The widely distributed video sparked outrage and elicited questions about the amount of force used to make the arrest in a city still dealing with mistrust over the 2014 police chokehold death of Eric Garner. (AP Photo/User Generated Content)

NEW YORK (AP) — Video showing New York City police officers arresting a young black man sparked outrage and elicited questions about the amount of force used to make the arrest in a city where mistrust of police remains high more than five years after Eric Garner’s death from an officer’s chokehold.

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Fitzroy Gayle, 20, pleads for help in the video, recorded by a woman who then tweeted it, as several officers wrestle him into submission Wednesday evening on a Brooklyn sidewalk. When Gayle asked a lone plainclothes officer why he was being stopped, the officer did not appear to answer before uniformed backup rushed in.

Police Commissioner Dermot Shea said Thursday he was ordering an internal investigation.

The man in the video had fled officers who approached him and another man as they were smoking marijuana in a park around 7 p.m., Shea said. The officers were responding to an automated alert to gunshots, Shea said. Both men were later apprehended, but there is no indication they were linked to the gunfire, he said.


Gayle was arrested and charged with resisting arrest, obstructing governmental administration and marijuana possession. The second man, whom police have not identified, was issued a summons. The episode is under internal review.

Shea said there were “some disturbing points” to the video.

One of the officers could be seen standing on the man’s ankle, he said, offering a possible explanation for why Gayle screamed during the scrum.

Photos of Gayle taken after the arrest showed abrasions to his knee but no apparent injuries to his face or upper body, the commissioner said.

“The end is what concerns me,” Shea said.

A better outcome would have seen officers approaching the men followed by “discussion and no running” from police, he said. “No physical resistance at all. No arrest needed.”

Gayle’s lawyer, Sanford Rubenstein, said the video demonstrates “that the era of stop and frisk is not over in New York City. The police officers involved in this brutal assault must be brought to justice.”

Rev. Kevin McCall, a civil rights activist in Brooklyn, said Gayle’s family was calling for District Attorney Eric Gonzalez to open his own investigation into the officers’ conduct. McCall also said Shea should suspend the officers.

The arrest came on the heels of renewed spotlight on stop, question and frisk, a policing strategy once championed by former Mayor Mike Bloomberg, who expressed regret for its overuse as he launched his now-suspended campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination.

At its peak, stop and frisk resulted in millions of police stops of mostly black and Hispanic New Yorkers. A federal judge ruled the practice as unconstitutional in 2012, and the city drastically decreased its use the following year.

Data released last month showed such encounters increased by 22% last year. NYPD officers conducted 13,459 stop and frisk procedures in 2019, up from 11,008 in 2018. Black people and non-white Hispanic people were 88% of those stopped and 90% of those frisked, and 88% of those against whom force was used, according to an analysis by the New York Civil Liberties Union. The organization said the data did not indicate a significant increase in stop and frisk activity.

About 66% of the 2019 stops resulted in neither an arrest nor a summons.

Video clips of Wednesday night’s arrest had been viewed or shared millions of times on Twitter and was the latest episode in recent months to spark outrage about perceived overuse of force or unjust arrests by police.

In October, bystander video showed a white police officer punching a black teenager during a brawl on a Brooklyn subway platform, leading hundreds of people to march in protest.

A few weeks later, officers were accused of pulling their guns on a group of black trick-or-treaters on Halloween in Brooklyn and detaining three of them for several hours. In November, officers detained two women for selling churros without a license at subway stations, sparking backlash on social media after a video of one of the encounters went viral.

Last August, the police department fired the officer whose chokehold led to Garner’s dying gasps of “I can’t breathe,” a mantra that gave voice to a national debate over race and police use of force. Video of the confrontation between Garner, who was black, and the white officer drew outrage and was viewed millions of times.


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Micheal
Micheal
4 years ago

I wonder if the police commissioner ever did arrest in his life. So he say that the end disturbs him, so u are a officer u arrive on the on a call see other officers trying to arrest someone and he’s fighting back, what’s is your reaction? Isn’t it to try to help the officers and hold on to his ankel or hand ? This commsinior is clearly saying this because of political reasons. if he would say that the stop in begin with concerns him ok i understand but the Ankle ? It’s a reaction of a cop , they didn’t punch him all they did is trying to hold on to him and he’s fighting back. And the reason he’s fighting with cops has to do with Way Deblazio is teaching them to disrespect cops.

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
4 years ago

We are arresting people for pot? Why?

Local taxpayer
Local taxpayer
4 years ago

Evil nazi bastards. These G-d damn Donut Eaters think they own the world. A bunch of lowlife thugs who love the fact that they can legally brutalize the local citizenry without any compunction. Police brutality is sanctioned by City Hall. City Council approves of these actions. Can you tell me why they needed 18 cops to stomp the victim to the ground? Are these donut eaters that weak? Is this the training they get? A bunch of little sissy cowards. And we are supposed to respect these gangsters? I think we should get the askanim to rip off their fellow Yidden and raise $50,000 for each of these individual cops. It was bad enough when these very same askanim were silent when New Yorks finest gunned down Gideone Bush execution style right in the heart of Boro Park. His crime? Behavioral health issues. Thank you Howard Safer.

Dr. Eli
Dr. Eli
4 years ago

Local Taxpayer,

I am glad you brought up Gideon Bush and that you are appalled by thos video as well. Mr. Bush reportedly was a mentally ill person with a weapon (scissors if I recall correctly) and yet so many of us were furious that the police responded with Gunfire rather than containment and trying to de-escalate an individual in an emotional crisis. If we are concerned about such behavior then we must certainly also be concerned about situations like Eric Garner and Amidou Diallo where unarmed men were gunned or violently strangled for being a little confrontational (or just pulling out their wallet). The first steps to fixing this includes punishing police officers who feel the need to use 7 men to take down an unarmed 20-year old who already was being detained and not trying to escape or get in attack mode. Of course he struggled when down, who wouldnt with six people piling up on him/her?!

Liam K. Nuj
Liam K. Nuj
4 years ago

Looks like our resident racists (DumpInWhiteHouse, Unedumacated Farchy, AH, et al) are still asleep.

Judge Hay
Judge Hay
4 years ago

Don’t resist arrest or you have total breakdown of civilized society. Bring your grievance to the stationhouse or court. Cops here did nothing wrong.

anonymous
anonymous
4 years ago

The video of the 15 black teens beating an innocent girl in Crown Hts. is very disturbing. This video shows a guy resisting arrest. Don’t resist arrest. Period.

Circle
Circle
4 years ago

And to think there are frum Yidden who voted for Deblasio and would vote for him again.
This is a frightening video. Could you imagine this happening to a Yeshiva guy on his way home from learning Friday night? Getting stopped by someone claiming to be a cop and then beating you up for not obeying a stranger’s orders?