As tension continues to brew nationwide over police violence and African Americans — including the shooting of a therapist who was assisting an autistic man — more incidents are beginning to surface, showing officers becoming aggressive with civilians.

In a recently released police dashcam video, a White Austin, Texas, police officer violently throws a Black woman to the ground during a traffic stop, followed by another white officer telling her black people have “violent tendencies” and that Whites are justifiably afraid.

Austin Police Chief Art Acevedo condemned both officers’ actions. He called the officer’s comments on the video “disturbing” and said a criminal investigation has been opened against the officer who arrested Breaion King.

The traffic stop happened in June 2015 but was not made public until the Austin American-Statesman published the video Thursday. Acevedo called a news conference hours later and said both officers have been taken off street patrol and are on desk duty pending new internal investigations, which he said will include both officers’ conduct in the year since the incident.

Acevedo issued a public apology to King and she responded Friday morning.

“I appreciate it very much, and it’s a step in the right direction,” King told the Statesman, which identified the woman as a schoolteacher.

She said what happened to her “is an opportunity to make things better and to change things for the better.”

The video is surfacing amid heightened nationwide tension over police treatment of Black people.

“For those that think life is perfect for people of color, I want you to listen to that conversation and tell me we don’t have social issues in this nation,” said Acevedo, who is Hispanic. “Issues of bias. Issues of racism. Issues of people being looked at different because of their color.”

In the second of two videos, Officer Patrick Spradlin is heard talking to King, who was pulled over for speeding, about race while driving her to jail.

“Why are so many people afraid of black people?” Spradlin asks.

King replies that she is also trying to figure that out.

“I can give you a really good idea why it might be that way,” he said. “Violent tendencies.”

Spradlin goes on to say that “I don’t blame” White people for being afraid because of violence in the Black community. “Some of them, because of their appearance and whatnot, some of them are very intimidating,” he says.

Acevedo said King did not file a complaint after the arrest and that he did not know about the traffic stop until this week, saying his subordinates should have previously alerted him to the video.

King told the newspaper that the encounter changed how she views police. Acevedo said she was pulled over for driving 15 mph over the speed limit when Officer Bryan Richter ordered her out of the car. The video shows him nearly throwing her into an adjacent truck while trying to place her under arrest in a Wendy’s parking lot.

“I’ve become fearful to live my life,” King told the newspaper. “I would rather stay home. I’ve become afraid of the people who are supposed to protect me and take care of me.”

Richter can be heard in the video ordering King to “stop resisting” as he orders her out of the car. The angle of the video doesn’t fully show King while she is inside the car.

Richter orders King to put her hands behind her back while the two struggle on the ground.

Richter has been a police officer since 2010 and Spradlin since 2001, according to Austin police. The Austin police union said in a statement that it understands the public’s reaction to Richter’s response and that Spradlin’s comments were “wrong and not reflective of the values and beliefs of the men and women who serve this community.”


With Associated Press