Monday, April 26, 2021

HARDLY A DAY GOES BY WITHOUT BAD COPS MAKING ALL COPS LOOK BAD

‘Ready for the Pop?’ Cops Laughed at Body-Cam of Violent Arrest of ‘Ancient’ Woman With Dementia, Video Shows

 

Colorado officers Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali arrested Karen Garner, a 73-year-old with dementia and fractured her arm, after she apparently forgot to pay for her Walmart groceries

 

By Jamie Ross


Daily Beast

April 26, 2021

 

 

Officers Hopp and Jalali arrested 73-year-old Gardner, who has dementia, last June after she left Walmart without paying for $13-worth of items. Body-camera footage (pictured) showed Hopp slamming Gardner to the ground after she repeatedly said: 'I'm going home'

 

Two Colorado cops violently arrested a 73-year-old woman who has dementia—then were caught on camera celebrating and laughing when they reviewed their horrific body-cam footage hours later at the police station.

The two officers have been identified as Austin Hopp and Daria Jalali of the Loveland Police Department. They arrested 73-year-old Karen Garner on June 26, 2020, after she left a Walmart with $13 of goods that she hadn’t paid for. Garner’s family says she forgot to pay because of her condition.

According to the Denver Post, Hopp found Garner walking home after Walmart staff had reported her. Body-cam footage released this month showed Hopp tackling the terrified woman to the ground when she refused to stop walking way from him, then he handcuffed her and pushed her hard against his cruiser. A concerned citizen can be seen stopping by the side of the road to ask Hopp if so much force was necessary.

The cops fractured the woman’s arm and dislocated her shoulder during the arrest, her family has said, and it’s this horrific body-cam footage that the officers were caught on surveillance camera watching as Garner sat in a nearby cell for hours after her ordeal at the hands of the police.

 

'Ready for the pop?' Hopp is heard saying in apparent reference to Gardner's arm coming out of its socket as she was pressed up against a squad car
'Ready for the pop?' Hopp is heard saying in apparent reference to Garner's arm coming out of its socket as she was pressed up against a police car


“Ready for the pop?” Hopp said to Jalali and another officers while they gathered round to watch the footage of the violent arrest. “What popped?” another officer asked. “I think it was her shoulder,” Hopp replied. These comments can be heard at 48:30 in the video.

Hopp can be heard saying “I can’t believe I threw a 73-year-old on the ground,” while Jalali comments: “It’s like live TV... Body-cams are my favorite thing to watch, I could watch livestream body-cams all day.” The third officer can be heard suggesting “The Body-Cam Show” as a title for a proposed television special, and says to Hopp: “Impressive, buddy.”

After releasing the video on YouTube, Garner’s attorney, Sarah Schielke, said in a statement: “This is utterly disgusting. These videos cannot be unseen or unheard. I am sorry to have to share them with the public. This will be traumatic and deeply upsetting for everyone to see.”

“But as it often goes with bad police departments, it seems this is the only way to make them change,” the attorney went on. “They have to be exposed. If I didn’t release this, the Loveland Police’s toxic culture of arrogance and entitlement, along with their horrific abuse of the vulnerable and powerless, would carry on, business as usual.”

Garner’s family filed a federal lawsuit against the police officers earlier in April. Schielke said Monday that two more officers have been added as defendants in the suit, alleging they knew that Garner was hurt but didn’t give her medical care for six hours while she was in custody.

The Loveland Police Department has placed Hopp on administrative leave and re-assigned Jalali to desk duties while an internal investigation continues. Garner’s attorney said, to date, her client has received no apology from the officers, the police department, or the city.

The police department is yet to comment on the new video.

2 comments:

Trey said...

I wish the media and bloggers would place as much emphasis on publishing the good things that cops do everyday as much as they publish the bad reports about cops.

Gary said...

So all the "good" cops knew what the office Hopp had done, but none of them cared enough about either the old woman or their own honor to do anything about it. This is another great example of why people are losing trust and respect for the police, not just the "bad" cop, but the "good" cops who really aren't.