Phoenix officers suspended for 24 hours after repeatedly punching deaf man with cerebral palsy during arrest

Three Phenix police officers will receive 24 hours a day, and unpaid suspension elements, and two of them must undergo more training, after that. The arrest of a deaf man suffering from cerebral palsy Last year, the police chief said on Wednesday.
Tyron Mcalpin was arrested on August 19, 2024, after a man who participated in a battle in a store indicated Mcalpin – who was walking – while speaking to the officers, according to the police report.
Show the video mcalpin Arrest Almost once the police leave her car. Mcalpin was installed and shocked with a thunderbolt pistol, and the video appears.
Mcalpin was charged with criminal assault and arrest resistance, but Marikuba County Rachel Mitchell Province Reject In October after reviewing the case.
McClbine’s lawyer said at the time that the injuries of the officers during the detention resulted from their “concerned attack and violence on Tirion.”
“The administration has set violations of policies” after an administrative investigation of detention, “the Phoenix police administration said in a statement on Wednesday.
The statement did not specify the officers. A police spokesman said that the administration does not call the officers because the possible appeal process is suspended.
The administration said that all the three offices received unpaid comments 24 hours a day, and two of them will be required to undergo additional training to escalate.
Police said the pendants for 24 hours are in total, so if the officers are working in eight -hour attacks, this would be a three -day suspension.
“Our priority is always the safety of our society, our welfare and our officers. We understand the concerns that this incident raised, and we take them seriously,” said temporary police chief Michael Sullivan.
Police said in the accident report that the accident occurred after someone contacted the number 911 about a battle in the Sirkel K store. The caller said that the white man was the aggressor and was still inside the store, according to the report.
The police wrote in the report that the man referred to McClabin, a black, and he claimed that he assaulted him.
McClene’s lawyer, Jesse Shawalter, said that the police used excessive force and did not meet an employee who will kick K or anyone asking what happened.
In the video, “What you see is simply Tyron tries to avoid hitting it again and again by the officer who swings over and over again on his face,” said Shawalter in October.
There is no indication that the officers knew that Mcalpin was deaf or suffering from cerebral palsy before his arrest.
“Our goal is to learn from this and progress together as a stronger section and society,” Sullivan, the commander of the temporary police, said in a statement on Wednesday.
Shawalter did not immediately respond to a request that was sent via the email for the comment that was sent to the law firm late Wednesday afternoon.