Colorado Grandmother w/ Dementia Shoulder Dislocated and Bones Broken by Aggressive Cops

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LOVELAND, Colo. -- A police officer who arrested a 73-year-old woman with dementia, pushing her to the ground and handcuffing her, after she walked away from a store without paying for about $14 worth of items last year was placed on administrative leave Thursday pending the outcome of a police investigation into the arrest.

The moves came a day after Karen Garner filed a federal lawsuit against the city of Loveland and police officers over her June 2020 arrest. Two other officers targeted in the lawsuit - a backup officer and a supervisory sergeant - have been reassigned to administrative duties, the Loveland Police Department said.

"LPD takes very seriously the allegations concerning the arrest of resident Karen Garner, and shares with the community the concerns about video images that became public on Wednesday," the department said in a statement.

Police body camera video included as part of Garner's lawsuit shows an officer approaching her as she walked through a field along a road last summer where she had been picking wildflowers.

She shrugs with her arms outstretched when he questions why she did not stop despite him following her in a patrol car with his lights on, the video shows.

When she then turns her back to him and starts walking away, the video shows the officer quickly grab one of her arms, puts it behind her back and pushes her 80-pound (36-kilogram) body to the ground and puts her in handcuffs as she looks confused and repeatedly says "I am going home."

She initially holds on to the flowers in her restrained hands behind her back, the video shows.

When the video shows her questioning what is happening, the officer says "I told you to stop. You don't get to act this way."

The footage later shows Garner being held against the hood of the patrol car with her left arm bent up next to her head.

The officer implies in the video that she is trying to kick him but her legs are not visible. Soon she starts to slide down toward the ground and the video shows another officer who had recently arrived yelling: "Stand up! We're not going to hold you!"


The release of the footage and lawsuit come at a time of a national reckoning over police tactics during arrests, particularly against Black people. Garner and everyone involved in her arrest are white. But her lawyer, Sarah Schielke, said vulnerable people including the disabled can be taken advantage of by police abusing their power.

The police department said it had not received a complaint about Garner's arrest before the lawsuit was filed. However, the body camera footage shows a man who stopped to film the arrest talking to the arresting officer and later to the sergeant to express concern about what he saw. The sergeant, talking to the man in the background, tells him: "Just because you didn't see it doesn't mean it didn't happen."

Schielke said the man was "gaslit" and questioned why anyone in Garner's family would want to file a complaint given that reaction. To her, the sergeant's response shows that the culture of the department, along with a lack of training, are the root problems that led to the arrest.

"It's definitely not just a bad apple," she said.

According to the lawsuit, Walmart employees asked Garner to return to the store when they saw her leave without paying and took the items back - a soda, a candy bar, a T-shirt, and wipe refills - denying her request to pay for the items.

Someone from Walmart then called police to report Garner and the direction she walking but said the store had not suffered a loss, the lawsuit said. The charges against Garner were dismissed after prosecutors wrote in a motion that she "appears to be incapable of understanding her surroundings or her actions."

The lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, claims that Garner suffered a dislocated shoulder but that no one sought medical help until about six hours after she was arrested, when a deputy in the jail noticed she needed help.

The lawsuit claims the arrest violated her constitutional protections against excessive force and to have due process and also violated the Americans with Disabilities Act.

According to the lawsuit, forgetting to pay for items in stores is common among those with dementia. It also said Garner suffers from sensory aphasia, which impairs her ability to communicate and understand what other people are saying.

In addition to her physical injuries, the lawsuit claims Garner now experiences fear, trauma and anxiety whenever she leaves her home.

"What little freedom and happiness Ms. Garner enjoyed in her life as an elderly adult with declining mental health was, on June 26, 2020, recklessly and deliberately obliterated by the Loveland Police Department," it said.

That could've been anyone's grandmother. Police ain't shyt. :pacspit:
 

Shamayw_33

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I almost turned it off because they want us to feel bad for someone literally named Karen. However, this was uncalled for and unnecessary treatment of the elderly.

On a side note, never call the cops for a loved one suffering from mental impairments/illness. Cops will immediately escalate the situation and kill your loved one. Seen it time and time again.
 

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Police are not trained whatsoever to handle people with mental and physical disabilities.

plus they get impatient quickly and have a short temper.

It's like nothing in their fukking minds would think "ok, what are the reasons this elderly woman walking down the side of a fukking highway is not responding." :mindblown:

Whole policing system needs to be reimagined.
 

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On a side note, never call the cops for a loved one suffering from mental impairments/illness. Cops will immediately escalate the situation and kill your loved one. Seen it time and time again.

I've heard people say this, but what is the alternative?

There were several infamous cases of disturbed and troubled people killing their relatives during an episode. The instances where the person gets killed by cops gets more publicity, but the other scenario happens more frequently.

Also heard people say never call cops on neighbors, but I disagree with that as well.

Law enforcement system is flawed, and the profession attracts plenty of insecure people. But in a situation that may escalate into violence or tragedy, police presence helps diffuse it.
 

get these nets

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That could've been anyone's grandmother. Police ain't shyt. :pacspit:



Can't make this up
============
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/27/us/loveland-police-video-karen-garner.html#site-index
Video Shows Police Laughing at Footage of Arrest of Woman With Dementia
The woman, who walked out of a Walmart in Loveland, Colo., without paying for $13.88 worth of items, said in a lawsuit that the police had broken a bone in her arm and dislocated her shoulder.

oakImage-1619537267129-articleLarge.jpg

Video recorded inside a Colorado police station shows officers laughing at body camera footage of the arrest of Karen Garner, who has dementia.


April 27, 2021
A video released this week shows Colorado police officers laughing at footage of their department’s roadside arrest of a 73-year-old woman with dementia.

The woman, Karen Garner of Loveland, Colo., walked out of a Walmart last year without paying for $13.88 worth of items. Police officers broke a bone in her arm and dislocated her shoulder, according to a lawsuit she filed against the city and the officers.

In the newly released footage, an hourlong video uploaded to YouTube by the law firm representing Ms. Garner, three Loveland police officers laugh while they watch footage of Ms. Garner’s arrest.

“Hear the pop?” one officer says.

“What did you pop?” asks another.

“I think it was her shoulder,” the first officer responds.

On Sunday, Ms. Garner’s lawsuit was amended to add more officers as defendants.

“Can you stop it now?” one officer says as they watch the body camera footage of the arrest. “I hate it.”


“I love it,” another officer says, with a laugh. “This is great.”

Before watching the footage, one officer asks another if he had read Ms. Garner her Miranda rights. The officer says he had not.

“I can’t believe I threw a 73-year-old on the ground,” one officer says.

The Loveland Police Department did not immediately respond to questions about the footage on Tuesday.

In a statement last week, the department said that it was investigating the episode, and that the arresting officer had been placed on administrative leave. An officer who assisted in the arrest and an “on-scene supervisor” were reassigned to administrative duties, the department said.

“LPD takes very seriously the allegations concerning the arrest of resident Karen Garner, and shares with the community the concerns about video images that became public,” the department said.

On Tuesday, Ms. Garner’s relatives said they were “physically sickened” by the arrest.

“The Loveland Police treated her like an animal,” the family said in a statement. “They laughed and fist-bumped while they were doing it. They reveled in her pain and did nothing to address it. They relished in stripping her of all dignity.”
The video was released this week by Ms. Garner’s lawyer, Sarah Schielke, who said in an email that Ms. Garner’s family had hired a sound engineer to enhance audio on the booking videos from inside the station that showed officers watching body camera footage of Ms. Garner’s arrest.

Ms. Schielke said the officer pointing out the popping sound was Austin Hopp, who arrested Ms. Garner on June 26 as she was picking flowers on the side of a road on her way home from a nearby Walmart.

The police had been called after Walmart employees said Ms. Garner had walked out with $13.88 worth of items without paying. According to a Walmart spokesman, she had also removed an employee’s mask.

According to Ms. Garner’s lawsuit, filed on April 14 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, Officer Hopp stopped Ms. Garner, pushed her to the ground, handcuffed her and pinned her against his vehicle. The lawsuit says he twisted her arm behind her back, breaking a bone and dislocating her shoulder.

Officer Hopp; Daria Jalali, an assisting officer; Sgt. Philip Metzler, their supervisor; and the city of Loveland were named as defendants in the lawsuit, which alleges violations of the Americans With Disabilities Act, as well as use of excessive force and failure to provide medical care.

“The officers laugh, fist-bump and celebrate both the excessive force used on Ms. Garner and their intimidation of the citizen that attempted to complain about it,” Ms. Schielke said of the video from the police station.

“Body cams are my favorite thing to watch,” one officer says in the video. “I could watch livestream body cams all day.”

Based on the new footage, Ms. Schielke amended the lawsuit to add new defendants: Tyler Blackett, a Loveland community service officer, and Sgt. Antolina Hill, a Loveland Police officer.

The amended filing alleges the two “were both aware of Ms. Garner’s injuries and need for medical treatment and personally complicit in the continued denial of that critical care.”

Ms. Garner, who has dementia and sensory aphasia, which impairs her ability to understand and communicate, was not given medical attention for more than six hours, the lawsuit alleges.

Eric M. Ziporin, who is representing the city, said on Tuesday he had no comment about the pending litigation.

On April 15, the Loveland Police Department said that it had learned of the allegations of “excessive use of force and serious bodily injury” the day before and had not received any previous complaints about the arrest.

The department said it had placed Officer Hopp on administrative leave. Officer Jalali and Sergeant Metzler were put on desk duty.

The episode has reverberated through the city, about 45 miles north of Denver, prompting several investigations into the department’s use-of-force and training protocols.

The district attorney for Larimer County, Gordon P. McLaughlin, said last week that he had requested a criminal investigation, to be assisted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado and the F.B.I.

The city of Loveland announced a separate investigation into whether the officers had followed policy.
 
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Heard about this on Young Turks...


this ish is a cancer...these officers laughing about roughing up an older woman.

:hhh:Makes you wish someone would rough up some of the women in their families. Dislocated her shoulder and watch and laugh like it’s some highlight reel...


Then they look at us crazy when we say we don’t trust the police or we want to defund them...THIS. THIS right here is why
 

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Can't make this up
============
Video Shows Police Laughing at Footage of Arrest of Woman With Dementia
The woman, who walked out of a Walmart in Loveland, Colo., without paying for $13.88 worth of items, said in a lawsuit that the police had broken a bone in her arm and dislocated her shoulder.

oakImage-1619537267129-articleLarge.jpg

Video recorded inside a Colorado police station shows officers laughing at body camera footage of the arrest of Karen Garner, who has dementia.


April 27, 2021
A video released this week shows Colorado police officers laughing at footage of their department’s roadside arrest of a 73-year-old woman with dementia.

The woman, Karen Garner of Loveland, Colo., walked out of a Walmart last year without paying for $13.88 worth of items. Police officers broke a bone in her arm and dislocated her shoulder, according to a lawsuit she filed against the city and the officers.

In the newly released footage, an hourlong video uploaded to YouTube by the law firm representing Ms. Garner, three Loveland police officers laugh while they watch footage of Ms. Garner’s arrest.

“Hear the pop?” one officer says.

“What did you pop?” asks another.

“I think it was her shoulder,” the first officer responds.

On Sunday, Ms. Garner’s lawsuit was amended to add more officers as defendants.

“Can you stop it now?” one officer says as they watch the body camera footage of the arrest. “I hate it.”


“I love it,” another officer says, with a laugh. “This is great.”

Before watching the footage, one officer asks another if he had read Ms. Garner her Miranda rights. The officer says he had not.

“I can’t believe I threw a 73-year-old on the ground,” one officer says.

The Loveland Police Department did not immediately respond to questions about the footage on Tuesday.

In a statement last week, the department said that it was investigating the episode, and that the arresting officer had been placed on administrative leave. An officer who assisted in the arrest and an “on-scene supervisor” were reassigned to administrative duties, the department said.

“LPD takes very seriously the allegations concerning the arrest of resident Karen Garner, and shares with the community the concerns about video images that became public,” the department said.

On Tuesday, Ms. Garner’s relatives said they were “physically sickened” by the arrest.

“The Loveland Police treated her like an animal,” the family said in a statement. “They laughed and fist-bumped while they were doing it. They reveled in her pain and did nothing to address it. They relished in stripping her of all dignity.”
The video was released this week by Ms. Garner’s lawyer, Sarah Schielke, who said in an email that Ms. Garner’s family had hired a sound engineer to enhance audio on the booking videos from inside the station that showed officers watching body camera footage of Ms. Garner’s arrest.

Ms. Schielke said the officer pointing out the popping sound was Austin Hopp, who arrested Ms. Garner on June 26 as she was picking flowers on the side of a road on her way home from a nearby Walmart.

The police had been called after Walmart employees said Ms. Garner had walked out with $13.88 worth of items without paying. According to a Walmart spokesman, she had also removed an employee’s mask.

According to Ms. Garner’s lawsuit, filed on April 14 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado, Officer Hopp stopped Ms. Garner, pushed her to the ground, handcuffed her and pinned her against his vehicle. The lawsuit says he twisted her arm behind her back, breaking a bone and dislocating her shoulder.

Officer Hopp; Daria Jalali, an assisting officer; Sgt. Philip Metzler, their supervisor; and the city of Loveland were named as defendants in the lawsuit, which alleges violations of the Americans With Disabilities Act, as well as use of excessive force and failure to provide medical care.

“The officers laugh, fist-bump and celebrate both the excessive force used on Ms. Garner and their intimidation of the citizen that attempted to complain about it,” Ms. Schielke said of the video from the police station.

“Body cams are my favorite thing to watch,” one officer says in the video. “I could watch livestream body cams all day.”

Based on the new footage, Ms. Schielke amended the lawsuit to add new defendants: Tyler Blackett, a Loveland community service officer, and Sgt. Antolina Hill, a Loveland Police officer.

The amended filing alleges the two “were both aware of Ms. Garner’s injuries and need for medical treatment and personally complicit in the continued denial of that critical care.”

Ms. Garner, who has dementia and sensory aphasia, which impairs her ability to understand and communicate, was not given medical attention for more than six hours, the lawsuit alleges.

Eric M. Ziporin, who is representing the city, said on Tuesday he had no comment about the pending litigation.

On April 15, the Loveland Police Department said that it had learned of the allegations of “excessive use of force and serious bodily injury” the day before and had not received any previous complaints about the arrest.

The department said it had placed Officer Hopp on administrative leave. Officer Jalali and Sergeant Metzler were put on desk duty.

The episode has reverberated through the city, about 45 miles north of Denver, prompting several investigations into the department’s use-of-force and training protocols.

The district attorney for Larimer County, Gordon P. McLaughlin, said last week that he had requested a criminal investigation, to be assisted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado and the F.B.I.

The city of Loveland announced a separate investigation into whether the officers had followed policy.

Hire psychopaths to enforce the law brehs.

And that woman cop knew this shyt was wrong but was more concerned about being accepted as one of the boys than doing the right thing.
 

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The whole entire institution of law enforcement in this country needs to be purged. The problem isn't training. Its police culture that is the problem.
Exactly. They act like it’s them vs us. And they are tone deaf and just overall don’t give a fukk.
You would think with the addition of body cams the cops would at least Pretend to act right. But nah. They have the police union backing them. Qualified Immunity backing them. The republicans backing them. And the Blue Line backing them.

they have guns. They are organized. And they are mobile. Even if they fukk up they don’t pay for it. The taxpayers do.

Look at how ridiculous and backwards this is. For 14 bucks a cop probably making 80grand a year plus can Jack her up. Then sit around and joke with his other buddies who all probably make close to a 100 grand a year. All while on the clock.
 

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Video Shows Police Laughing at Footage of Arrest of Woman With Dementia
The woman, who walked out of a Walmart in Loveland, Colo., without paying for $13.88 worth of items, said in a lawsuit that the police had broken a bone in her arm and dislocated her shoulder.

This shyt. :snoop:

One of my grandmothers is currently going through some mild forms of memory loss. Someone is DYING if this happens to her.
 
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