Trooper who arrested Sandra Bland is fired: why now?
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Seven months after Sandra Bland was found hanging in a Texas jail, the public safety officer who arrested her during a confrontation after she failed to use her turn signal when changing lanes has been formally fired.
The Texas Department of Public Safety聽announced Wednesday that Brian Encinia would be terminated by the end of the day. The firing process began when Mr. Encinia was indicted in January. Until now, he was聽on paid desk duty and remained on payroll since Ms. Bland's arrest last summer.聽
鈥淚 have determined that you have not rebutted the charges set out in the statement of charges of January 28, 2016,鈥 the agency director Steve McCraw wrote in his . 鈥淣o cause has been presented to alter my preliminary decision. Therefore, it is now my decision that you be discharged from the Texas Department of Public Safety effective at 5:00 p.m.鈥
On Jan. 6, a grand jury in Hempstead, Texas, indicted Encinia on a perjury charge. But it wasn鈥檛 the first time a jury convened to consider wrongdoing in Ms. Bland鈥檚 case. In December, grand jurors declined to indict anyone pertaining to her death in jail.
The former trooper was charged for lying about the reasons for demanding Bland to leave her car, according to special prosecutor Shawn McDonald. He to do a safer traffic investigation.
Bland was pulled over in July on the outskirts of Houston for failing to use her turn signal, according to Encinia's report.聽The trooper arrested her for assaulting a public servant, though dashboard camera footage released after her death suggested that Encinia played a larger role in escalating the altercation than his reported indicated. Bland was found dead in her cell, three days later. Although her death has been ruled a suicide, her family argues that if she hadn鈥檛 been arrested, she would have never killed herself.
If convicted, Encinia鈥檚 penalty for perjury, a misdemeanor, would be up to a year in jail and a maximum fine of $4,000. The grand jury had met three times prior to the indictment, including once in December that resulted in the lack of indictment for anyone in connection to Bland鈥檚 death, including Waller County Jail employees.
The case became national news when a video of her arrest was made public. But this first video had technical problems, including a lag between the officer鈥檚 audio and the video.
A newer version was later released. But even now, Bland鈥檚 family wishes they had more information about the circumstances of her arrest and death, according to their attorney Cannon Lambert. The Texas Rangers' initial report, among other key documents, have not yet been released. It doesn鈥檛 help that in similar cases, Mr. Lambert says, police were fired almost immediately.
鈥淔or seven months now the family has been pulled in directions that could have been avoided,鈥 Lambert told the Los Angeles Times. 鈥淲hen you add insult to injury it just makes it harder to rebound.鈥
On the same day of his indictment 鈥 six months after Bland鈥檚 death 鈥 DPS began the process of firing Encinia. According to Director McCraw鈥檚 letter, the department cites three reasons for his departure from the agency: One, Encinia 鈥渇ailed to exercise patience and discretion throughout鈥 his encounter with Bland at the traffic stop. Two, he 鈥減rolonged the traffic stop beyond the time reasonably necessary to complete the tasks associated with the traffic infraction.鈥 And finally, he failed to follow the specific, seven-step protocol to interviewing a violator.
The dashcam video from Encinia's patrol car indicates how the traffic stop escalated. In it, the trooper can be be seen drawing his stun gun and telling Bland, "I will light you up!" after Bland refuses to get out of her car. When Bland does eventually step out, Encinia orders her to the side of the road. The confrontation continues off-camera but the audio still records.
Encinia鈥檚 attorney, Larkin Eakin Jr., said his client will appeal DPS鈥 decision. .
This report contains material from Reuters.