Graphic Video: Ex-Cop Charged After Deploying Taser, Kneeling on Pregnant Black Woman’s Neck

A recently-fired Miami Gardens, Florida, police officer has been booked and charged with battery and misconduct, following the emergence of disturbing video footage that both depicted the cop using “excessive force” on a Black woman and contradicted his subsequent reports.

Jordy Yanes Martel, a 30-year-old ex-cop with the Miami Gardens Police Department (MGPD), turned himself in to the Miami-based office of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) on Thursday.

Martel was fired from the MGPD on June 18, in connection with a complaint that referenced a video recorded in March which showed Martel and then-Officer Javier Castano abusing Miguel McKay, a Black man, over the suspicion that he may have been “doing doughnuts” with his car in the parking lot of a local gas station. Castano was also fired.

The manager of the club reportedly asked officers to issue a trespass warning to Satchell, after she allegedly threw a tip at a Tootsie’s waitress. The following scene ensued:

Be advised, the following footage contains content that some parties may find disturbing.

Many outlets have identified that Satchell was in the early stages of her pregnancy; however, she did not carry the child to full term. Neither Martel nor the other responding officers have been linked to that matter, reported Forbes.

Katherine Fernandez Rundle, the state attorney for Miami-Dade County, detailed Martel’s alleged actions during a Thursday news conference alongside FDLE Special Agent in Charge Troy Walker and Miami Gardens Mayor Oliver Gilbert.

Satchell “suffered abrasions to her stomach from the Tasers, bruises and abrasions on her arms and bruises on her legs,” according to the state attorney.

While Satchell was arrested on allegations of battery on an officer and resisting arrest with violence, those charges have since been dismissed, and the now-viral video appears to refute Martel’s reports on the matter.

Furthermore, the FDLE investigation concluded Martel “had no legal authority to detain the victim” when he first removed her from the vehicle, reported NBC Miami. Authorities noted that Martel chose to deploy his department-issued stun gun twice, despite other officers having “control over both the victims’ arms.”

The state attorney asserted that her office treats accused law enforcement officers “no differently than anyone else.” However, the Miami Herald reported in February that at least three officers of the Miami-Dade Police Department have been acquitted of charges that stemmed from several officers’ kicking and slapping of handcuffed suspects.

Miami Gardens Police Chief Delma Noel-Pratt asserted that the termination of Martel and Castano was necessary “because the behavior was egregious and will not be tolerated at the department,” as reported by Local 10 TV. The resisting arrest charge leveled against McKay was dropped by the state during a June 18 court hearing.

Martel, hired by the department back in October 2018, was seen leaving a local jail on the same day that he turned himself in. CBS Miami noted that he was booked into the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center on a $6,000 bond.

The outing of Martel’s misconduct comes amid ongoing anti-police brutality protests and demonstrations in the US, which particularly focus on the too-frequent deaths of Black Americans during police interactions. Many have called for the defunding of police forces nationwide and a reappropriation of funds toward local, unarmed social services.

“My client deserves to witness justice be served in this prosecution against this former officer where so many others in her position have not been as fortunate.”

Sourse: sputniknews.com

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