Cop pulls gun: Did police overreact at Texas pool party?
Updated Tuesday 8:30 am
After a of a Texas police officer pinning a teenage girl to the ground at a pool party on Friday went viral, the officer has been placed on administrative leave. But the debate is heating up over whether this was a case of excessive force used on non-white teens or one of an officer responding appropriately to a potentially dangerous situation.
The video shows several officers arriving at a pool party in McKinney, Tex., and telling the teenagers to get down on the ground. Several teens are handcuffed and an officer yells at others to leave while also shouting profanities. Eventually, the officer pulls out his gun and pushes a black girl in a bikini to the ground by her head and holds her with his knees on her back.
The McKinney Police Department on Facebook that a call came in regarding a disturbance at the Craig Ranch North Community Pool involving multiple juveniles who did not live in the community and refused to leave. 鈥淔irst responding officers encountered a large crowd that refused to comply with police commands,鈥 the statement said.
The disturbance in question, part of which , seemed to involve a verbal dispute that turned physical between adult members of the community and partygoers, involving racist comments made against the black teens at the party, according to BuzzFeed News.
Brandon Brooks, who shot and uploaded the video of the officer, later by multiple reports as Cpl. Eric Casebolt, 鈥淚 think a bunch of white parents were angry that a bunch of black kids who don鈥檛 live in the neighborhood were in the pool.鈥 Brooks said that many of the children at the party were at the pool on guest passes or had entered by jumping the fence.
When the police arrived, Brooks, who is white, said, 鈥淓veryone who was getting put on the ground was black, Mexican, Arabic,鈥 he said. 鈥淸The cop] didn鈥檛 even look at me. It was kind of like I was invisible.鈥
Many have come to the officer鈥檚 defense on social media, claiming his response was justified given that the children refused to leave when they were told.
Ben茅t Embry, a black resident of the community who witnessed the incident, he did not believe the conflict was racially motivated.
鈥淭his is not a racist neighborhood,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are a lot of good people in this community. It鈥檚 unfortunate that an event like this brings the spotlight.鈥
Embry also said the girl the officer pinned down had been talking back, exacerbating the situation.
鈥淪he鈥檚 bringing more stress into an already volatile situation,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ut of a hundred kids, you probably had seven who are acting the fool. They totally spoiled it for everybody else.鈥
The Associated Press reports that hundreds of demonstrators marched Monday night to the pool where a white police officer pinned a black teenage girl to the ground and pulled a gun on others over the weekend. The protesters carried signs that included the phrases, "My skin color is not a crime" and "Fire Eric Casebolt."
City spokeswoman Anna Clark said Casebolt joined the police force in August 2005. Prior to that, he served almost two years as a state trooper, according to records from the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement. Casebolt took eight hours of cultural diversity training at Collin County Community College in February 2009, and has also taken courses in racial profiling and use of force.
The girl claimed Casebolt told her to walk away but forced her down after "he thought we were saying rude stuff to him," according to an interview she gave to television station KDFW.
"He grabbed me, twisted my arm on my back and shoved me in the grass and started pulling the back of my braids," Dajerria Becton, 15, said. "I was telling him to get off me because my back was hurting bad."
"I understand how he was feeling, everybody surrounding him," she said. "I don't think he should have pulled a gun out on 15-year-old kids."
In a , Chief of Police Greg Conley said the McKinney Police Department was 鈥渃ommitted to treating all persons fairly under the law鈥 and would be launching an investigation into the officer鈥檚 behavior.
When asked if behaviors involving profanity and physical aggression were taught in officers鈥 training, Conley said, 鈥淚t鈥檚 something we鈥檙e going to have to look into, to determine what we鈥檙e training as far as the officers and their reaction on the scene. Anytime you confront a large group of people, it鈥檚 a very dynamic situation and tensions can rise very quickly.鈥