Rochester police officers handcuff and pepper-spray a 9-year-old girl after call of 'family trouble'
(CNN)Police officers in Rochester, New York, handcuffed and pepper-sprayed a 9-year-old girl while responding to what a police official called a report of "family trouble" in an incident sharply criticized by city officials.
Two
body camera videos of Friday's incident released by the police
department on Sunday show officers restraining the child, putting her in
handcuffs and attempting to get her inside the back of a police vehicle
as she repeatedly cries and calls for her father.
After the girl fails to follow commands to put her feet inside the car, the officers are seen pepper-spraying her.
The
girl was transported to Rochester General Hospital, where she was later
released, according to Rochester Deputy Police Chief Andre Anderson.
The
officers involved were suspended Monday, according to a news release
from city officials. CNN has reached out to the police union for
comment.
The incident has troubling similarities to the death of Daniel Prude, a Black man who died in March after Rochester police pinned him to the ground and placed a hood over his head as he experienced a mental health crisis.
The police body camera footage of that incident, released in August after city officials intentionally delayed its release,
led to protests over the police's treatment of Black people and those
experiencing mental health crises. Mayor Lovely Warren later fired the police chief, saying there was a "pervasive problem" in the police department.
CNN has not been able to verify the race of the 9-year-old with authorities or family members.
At
a news conference on Sunday, Interim Rochester Police Chief Cynthia
Herriott-Sullivan said that the police's treatment of the girl was not
acceptable.
"I'm
not going to stand here and tell you that for a 9-year-old to have to
be pepper-sprayed is OK. It's not," she said. "I don't see that as who
we are as a department, and we're going to do the work we have to do to
ensure that these kinds of things don't happen."
Warren said the girl reminded her of her own young daughter.
"I
have a 10-year-old daughter. So she's a child; she's a baby. And I can
tell you that this video, as a mother, is not anything that you want to
see. It's not," Warren said. "We have to understand compassion, empathy.
When you have a child that is suffering in this way, and calling out
for her dad, I saw my baby's face in her face."
Police responded to a report of 'family trouble'
Officers were called to a home on the afternoon of January 29 for a report of "family trouble," Anderson said Sunday.
The
officers were told the girl was "suicidal" and that she had "indicated
that she wanted to kill herself and she wanted to kill her mom," the
deputy chief explained.
The
girl tried to flee from officers, Anderson said, and video released by
police shows an officer chase her and attempt to provide assistance.
Afterward,
he said, her mother arrived and the body camera video shows the two
arguing. Anderson said officers then decided to remove the child from
the situation and transport her to an area hospital.
But
the girl refused to get inside a police vehicle, "thrashed around," and
kicked an officer, knocking his body camera around, according to
Anderson.
"It
didn't appear as if she was resisting the officers, she was trying not
to be restrained to go to the hospital," Anderson said. "As the officers
made numerous attempts to try to get her in the car, an officer sprayed
the young child with OC spray to get her in the car."
The
body camera video shows the girl repeatedly crying out for her father,
while being physically restrained by officers. She is seen screaming
before her head is held down against the snow-covered ground and is
handcuffed. A struggle ensues between the girl and officers as they
attempt to get her inside the back of a police vehicle.
At one point, one officer says, "You're acting like a child."
"I am a child!" the girl responds.
Later
in the video, a female officer is seen talking to the girl, eventually
saying, "This is your last chance, otherwise pepper spray's going in
your eyeballs." About a minute later, another officer can be heard
saying, "Just spray her at this point." The female officer is seen
shaking a can that appears to be pepper spray and the child continues to
scream.
The officers involved in the incident were not identified by police, nor were the child or her mother.
Anderson
said Sunday he was "not making any excuses for what transpired" and
that the department is "looking at a culture change." The department is
in the process of reviewing many policies and looking to make changes,
according to Anderson.
How police respond to mental health crises, minors
Mayor
Warren said she has directed the chief of police to conduct a complete
and thorough investigation of the incident and said she welcomes the
review of what happened by the city's police accountability board.
After Monday's officer suspensions, she said what happened was "simply horrible."
"Unfortunately, state law and union contract prevents me from taking more immediate and serious action," she said.
New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a tweet Monday that her office is looking into the incident as well.
"What
happened in Rochester on Friday is deeply disturbing and wholly
unacceptable. Such use of force and pepper spray should never be
deployed against a child, period. My office is looking into what
transpired, but it's clear that drastic reform is needed at (Rochester
Police Department)," James said.
Gov.
Andrew Cuomo said in his state and across the nation, the relationship
between police and community is "clearly not working."
"Rochester
needs to reckon with a real police accountability problem, and this
alarming incident demands a full investigation that sends a message this
behavior won't be tolerated," he said.
As in Prude's case, the law enforcement response to the girl underscores the struggles of police to properly deal with people experiencing mental health crises or threatening suicide.
Warren
said Sunday that she had spoken with the girl's mother and that the
city's person in crisis mental health team would be reaching out to the
family.
"It is clear from the video that we need to do more in supporting our children and families," Warren said.
New
York Civil Liberties Union executive director Donna Lieberman said
there was "no conceivable justification" for police to pepper spray a
9-year-old, and she called for a broader change in such responses.
"The
Rochester Police Department has no business serving as the first
responder in a mental health crisis that calls for mental health
expertise," she said in a statement. "It's time for a full
transformation of community safety, beginning with extracting the RPD
from responding to mental health crises and putting trained mental
health professionals in charge."
The
Rev. Lewis Stewart, president of the United Christian Leadership
Ministry of Western New York, said the police response was part of a
"pattern of inappropriate and inhumane behavior," including Prude's
death.
"This
incident ... highlights the urgency of the need to press forward
regarding reimagining and reinventing the police and public safety,"
Stewart said in a news conference Monday morning.
He
called on the officers involved to be suspended without pay and
federally investigated, and he said the Rochester Police Department
should reevaluate its approach to dealing with minors.
"Minors
should not be handcuffed. That must be banned," Stewart said. "Children
must not be chemically sprayed. That, too, must be banned."
There was a small rally and protest march Monday evening, according to CNN affiliate WHAM. With temperatures in the 20's, dozens of people walked through the streets and stopped at a police precinct.
Correction: Earlier versions of this article gave the wrong day for the incident. It occurred Friday.
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