Africanews english Live

Cop Fired for Dragging guy from automobile, using ‘soccer style Kick’, time and again Punching Him


 
In 2016, Deputy Rod Brown was given the award of Deputy of the Month from the Montgomery County sheriff’s department for his response to a fatal crash associated with a police pursuit, where he extinguished a car fire and pulled a victim from the burning vehicle. Fast forward to the present week and he was fired for pulling another person from a vehicle, but rather than saving him, he beat the hell out of him.

Brown was seen on disturbing video footage pulling a person through the passenger side of a vehicle, delivering repeated punches and kicks that were entirely unnecessary.

The incident unfolded in July after Rondale Hampton led Brown on a lookconsistent with WHIO, Hampton was indicted on failure to comply charges connected to the chase last month and is now out of jail on bond. He’s pleaded innocent to the costs.

Sheriff Rob Streck fired Brown for his actions that night — both for the excessive violence utilized by the deputy likewise as his name-calling and language.

“The ISU investigation found that deputies aren't trained to strike subjects within the face to achieve compliance. Likewise, the soccer-style kick to the stomach is additionally not away during which deputies trained,” the report read. “Deputy Brown’s language wasn't only unnecessary, it had been discourteous, disrespectful, and unprofessional.”

Naturally, the police union disagrees and claims that when Brown pulled Hampton from the car by his arm, repeatedly punching him, calling him a f*****, and kicking him sort of a ball, the deputy “used appropriate force to effectuate an arrest” which it had been “necessary.” The union excused Brown’s behavior, noting that his violence was excusable because he had “tunnel vision” after Hampton allegedly wrecked into another officer’s cruiser.

“Deputy Brown described this event joined of the foremost violent things he has seen altogether his years as an enforcement officer,” the summary read. “When he visited the suspect vehicle to effectuate the arrest, he said he had a vision defect.”

The video tells a unique story, however. It shows Brown drag him from the passenger’s side of the vehicle while delivering repeated closed-fist punches to his head before delivering the soccer-style kick to Hampton’s stomach. the whole time, Hampton is apologizing.

As Hampton was on the bottom apologizing to officers, Brown told him “You ain’t going home, you’re visiting prison f*****!”

Although he was given the award in 2016, WHIO discovered that Brown contains a but stellar record over the years. inline with their report:

Brown was hired by the sheriff’s office as a corrections officer in August 1999 and was promoted to deputy in 2006.

A review of Brown’s personnel records shows multiple performance reviews, where his supervisor noted he needed improvement in compliance with rules and regulations.

In February 2015, Brown was issued an employee performance plan after receiving a written reprimand for hitting someone within the face during an arrest. He was warned of the potential of more severe punishment if it happened again.

“Once handcuffed, the suspect spit in your face and you instinctively delivered a final strike to the subject's face…the final instinctive strike was deemed inconsistent with Sheriff’s Office policies and procedures,” the reprimand read.

His past has no finally returned to haunt him, and for now, the abusive officer is off the road.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

State Law Lets Cops Steal Cars of Innocent People and They’ve Done it 14,000 Times in 3 Years

Canada Extends Work Permit Eligibility for Visitors: A Gateway to Opportunities

Revolutionizing Policing: How ChatGPT, Google Colab, and Kaggle Are Transforming the Fight Against Police Brutality