A Baltimore police officer has been put on paid leave after he was filmed repeatedly punching a man and knocking him to the ground

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A Baltimore police officer has been put on paid leave after he was filmed repeatedly punching a man and knocking him to the ground

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Baltimore police

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A Baltimore police officer was put on paid leave after he was filmed punching a man

  • A Baltimore police officer was put on paid leave on Saturday after a recording surfaced showing him repeatedly punching a man during a confrontation.
  • The recording lasts about 30 seconds, and the city's interim police commissioner said the video "deeply disturbed" him.
  • Warren Brown, an attorney for the man who was knocked down, identified his client as 26-year-old DaShawn McGrier.
  • Brown said his client faces charges for assaulting the officer, whom he identified as Arthur Williams, in June - charges McGrier is contesting in court.

A Baltimore police officer was put on paid leave on Saturday after a video surfaced online showing him repeatedly punching a man and knocking him down over steps on a sidewalk during a confrontation.

The recording lasts about 30 seconds, and the city's interim police commissioner said the video "deeply disturbed" him.

The video begins with the officer standing in front of a black man who has his back to a wall. The officer, who is also black, can be seen shoving the man in the chest before the officer starts throwing punches.

The man tries to block punches from the officer but doesn't appear to fight back. The man is pushed over some steps by the officer who continues to throw punches, and the video ends with the officer on top of him.

"I'm deeply disturbed by the video that surfaced online earlier today," interim Police Commissioner Garry Tuggle said in a statement. "The officer involved has been suspended while we investigate the totality of this incident. Part of our investigation will be reviewing body worn camera footage."

Tuggle is asking any witnesses to contact the department's Office of Professional Responsibility at 410-396-2300.

"While I have an expectation that officers are out of their cars, on foot, and engaging citizens, I expect that it will be done professionally and constitutionally," he said. "I have zero tolerance for behavior like I witnessed on the video today. Officers have a responsibility and duty to control their emotions in the most stressful of situations."

Warren Brown, an attorney for the man who was knocked down, identified his client as 26-year-old Dashawn McGrier.

Brown said his client faces charges for allegedly assaulting the officer, whom he identified in June to the Baltimore Sun as Arthur Williams, charges McGrier is contesting in court.

Brown said the officer saw McGrier on Saturday and tried to provoke him as a result of their June encounter.

"He is charged with assaulting that officer then, and so here this officer now is like, you know, going after him," Brown said.

Brown said a court date is set for August 22 on the assault charges, and he said video of that encounter between the two men also exists, though he has not seen it.

Brown said he has scheduled a Monday news conference to discuss plans for filing a complaint against the officer.

"It is just an act of police brutality that was unwarranted, and it just does nothing for police-community relations," Brown said. "It does nothing to lower crime. My client was not involved in any criminal activity. It's just gratuitous violence that's unnecessary and does no good for the city."

Brown said his client was being treated in a Baltimore hospital. He said McGrier "may have suffered a broken jaw, a broken nose, maybe some fractured ribs, and he had difficulty with feeling his left leg, although before I left he did say that he was beginning to get the feel back in his foot, left foot."

In a news release, Baltimore police spokesman T.J. Smith said the man was not criminally charged and has been released from custody.

Smith said the Office of Professional Responsibility "immediately" began investigating after learning of the video.

The officer, who has been with the agency for more than a year, was then immediately suspended, Smith said. He also said the second officer involved in the incident is on administrative duties pending an investigation.

Williams graduated from the police academy last year and received top awards for his performance in "defense tactics, physical training, and emergency vehicle operations."

During his graduation, he was applauded for his "academic achievement, professional attitude, appearance, and ability to supervise."

Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh released a statement after watching the video of the incident.

"I am in close contact with interim Commissioner Tuggle who has not only suspended the officer in question but has launched an immediate investigation into the full circumstances of this encounter," she said.

Pugh added: "We are working day and night to bring about a new era of community-based, Constitutional policing and will not be deterred by this or any other instance that threatens our efforts to re-establish the trust of all citizens in the Baltimore Police Department."

Former NAACP head Ben Jealous, a Democrat who is running for governor, said the video "shows just how far community-police relations have fallen in Baltimore, as well as the work that must be done in partnership with city officials to restore trust."

"Building trust begins first and foremost by responding swiftly and transparently, which is why I am heartened that the officer has been suspended pending internal review," Jealous said in a statement. "Long term, we need to be investing in our communities and recruiting police officers who have the temperament, tools, and training to keep us safe without resorting to unnecessary violence."

Baltimore entered a federal consent decree last year after federal investigators detailed longstanding patterns of unconstitutional policing, racial profiling, and excessive force.

A consent decree, filed in federal court and overseen by a monitor, is generally a road map for changes in fundamental police department practices. In Baltimore's case, the agreement mandates changes in the most fundamental aspects of daily police work, including use of force, searches and arrests.

Federal authorities began investigating city police following the April 2015 death of Freddie Gray, a young black man who was fatally injured while in the custody of officers.

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