San Diego Police seen punching man during arrest
Police seen punching man during arrest
and last updated 2021-05-13 03:04:46-04
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - The San Diego Police Department is investigating a takedown involving two officers and an apparent homeless man.
Nicole Bansal took the video at the intersection of the La Jolla Village Drive and Torrey Pines Road around 9 a.m. Wednesday. I was pulling up to the intersection; a cop car came up fast behind me, two men- cops- jumped out of the car and immediately went towards this unhoused homeless man, she said. The immediate reaction for cops to start trying to arrest him or take him down, it s just shocking. That s why I immediately pulled out my phone and started recording.
May 7, 2021 10:35 pm
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (WLNE)- Providence Police released body cam footage from an early morning arrest of a man possibly on drugs who later died.
Police responded to a report of a man screaming in the middle of Collyer St. in Providence while “possibly on drugs” at around 12:30 Friday morning, according to a report.
Upon arrival officers saw 34-year-old Joseph Ventre yelling and screaming in a grassy field.
When officers tried to talk to Ventre and ask him questions he paced back and forth and also rolled in the dirt. He also didn’t respond to any of their questions.
How Using Videos At Chauvin Trial And Others Impacts Criminal Justice
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This image from video shows Minneapolis police officers Thomas Lane, left, and J. Alexander Kueng, right, escorting George Floyd, center, to a police vehicle outside Cup Foods in Minneapolis, on May 25, 2020. The image was shown as prosecutor Steve Schleicher gave closing arguments in the trial of Derek Chauvin for the death of Floyd.
AP
As the one-year anniversary of the death of George Floyd approaches, one thing is certain: the protests and court proceedings after his murder in Minneapolis might never have happened without a bystander s video. Videos of many incidents across this country, are transforming law enforcement from police training to prosecutions. It s a change that s been three decades in the making.
North Carolina leaders push new bill on police body camera footage in wake of Andrew Brown Jr. s shooting death If we had Senate Bill 510 in effect now, the family would already have the video, said N.C. State Senator Ben Clark in response to the Andrew Brown Jr. case.
Credit: WVEC Published: 1:48 PM EDT April 27, 2021 Updated: 1:48 PM EDT April 27, 2021
ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. Following the release of only 20 seconds of bodycam footage showing what happened the day Andrew Brown Jr. was killed by a Pasquotank County deputy, North Carolina state senators are speaking out about a new proposal they recently submitted that could change the course of how body camera videos are released.