Sacramento police release video of controversial encounter with pregnant woman - Los Angeles Times
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Sacramento police release video of controversial encounter with pregnant woman

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Sacramento police on Thursday released body-camera images from a controversial encounter last month in which an officer grabbed the arm of a pregnant woman who moments later fell to the ground.

The department released a statement saying officials decided to post the dramatic and, at times, profane video, which is broken into four clips, on YouTube because they’re dedicated to transparency.

On July 9, a police license-plate reader detected a stolen vehicle, according to the statement, and officers soon found the car and detained a female driver. But police then began looking for a male suspect, who they say had an outstanding warrant and was last seen at an apartment complex in northern Sacramento.

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Officers eventually went to the complex and spotted a man who police say closely matched the suspect’s description seated outside the apartments. Police said the man ran inside and locked the door.

In the first clip, the officer wearing the body camera charges toward the apartment shouting, “Hands! Let me see your hands, put your hands up!” He then shouts, again, using an expletive as he tells someone to put their hands up.

The video is too dark to show to whom the officer is speaking, but moments later the camera captures an image of the pregnant woman standing in front of the doorway.

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The Sacramento Bee newspaper identified the woman as Zityrua Abraham and said she told reporters after the incident that police threw her on the ground.

As the woman shouts, “My kid is in the house, come on, wait a minute, my son lives here!” an officer yells, “Hey, move, move!”

A second later, an officer pulls her by her right arm, away from the porch. The officer wearing the body camera then turns toward the doorway, and the woman isn’t seen falling to the ground. But a few seconds later, her reflection in a window shows her getting up from the grass.

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“It appears,” the police wrote in the statement, “her momentum took her from the paved walkway to the uneven grass surface. She lost her balance and fell to the ground.”

Moments after the woman stood up, an officer draws his gun and another kicks in the door. The woman can be heard shouting, “Why are y’all doing this to my house?” as she pleads with them, explaining that her 1-year-old son was inside. “He’s a baby!”

A few moments later, she’s recorded saying, “I get pushed down and I’m pregnant and my son is in the house. Come on now. I’m going to need everybody’s badge numbers.”

In the second clip, the woman tells an officer that her stomach is “tensing up” and he asks her if she needs medical attention.

“Yes,” she responds. “I do.” The officer then says he’ll call her an ambulance.

In the third clip, the same officer explains to the woman that they’d received a tip that someone who looked like the man they’d seen in front of her apartment had stolen a car.

The suspect, the officer said, had a felony warrant and “a really violent past.” The Bee identified the man as the boyfriend of the pregnant woman’s mother.

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In the last clip, an officer lets the man out a patrol car and removes handcuffs from his wrists. Another officer then explains to the man that they’d mistakenly taken him into custody because he matched a suspect’s description.

Two days later, police said, the woman filed a complaint with the department’s internal affairs division. The investigation is ongoing, but officials said in a statement that none of the involved officers have been put on leave.

The delay in releasing the video, police said, was meant to protect the integrity of the investigation, which they said had progressed far enough by Thursday that they felt confident its release would not compromise the investigation.

Sacramento Police Chief Daniel Hahn, who was sworn in last week, decided to release the video in what the department described as “an ongoing effort to improve our organizational transparency.”

To read the article in Spanish, click here

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