Video paints a new picture in Ronald Greene death case
- Louisiana authorities claims undercut when a video showed the police tasing, dragging, choking and beating the man
- The police initially told Greene's relatives that he died on impact when his car crashed into a tree during the chase
- Only later did Louisiana state police acknowledge that they had used force during the arrest
Louisiana authorities initial claims that a black man died after a crash in a high speed chase were severely undercut when a video was released which showed the police tasing, dragging, choking and beating the man.
The controversy began on May 10, 2019, when police tried to stop a car, which was being driven by Ronald Greene, for an unspecified traffic violation.
The police initially told Greene’s relatives that he died on impact when his car crashed into a tree during the chase.
But a written police report later said Greene survived the crash and struggled with troopers trying to arrest him. It said he died en route to a hospital.
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Only later did Louisiana state police acknowledge that they had used force during the arrest, which they said was justified.
But body-cam and dash-cam video obtained by the Associated Press, as well as additional video later released by the state, tells a different story.
The AP said the video it had obtained shows troopers, all of them white, opening Greene’s car, jolting him with a stun gun as he screams “I’m sorry” and “I’m afraid.” A trooper then wrestles him to the ground, places him in a chokehold and punches his face; another drags him by shackles on his ankles.
He is Tased again while lying on the ground in handcuffs.
Greene is then left moaning, facedown, for more than nine minutes while officers wipe blood from their hands.
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In one body-cam video released later by state police, one trooper can be heard saying he had “choked him and everything else, trying to get him under control… we were still wrestling with him, trying to hold him down, ’cause he was spitting blood everywhere — and then, all of a sudden, he just went limp.”
Videos show multiple Taser prongs embedded in Greene’s skin.
In May 2020, the family filed a wrongful-death suit, arguing that a police beating had left Greene “bloodied and in cardiac arrest.”
The suit alleges that there was no sign the front of Greene’s vehicle had struck anything or that his airbag had deployed. It said an independent autopsy had found severe head injuries that were inconsistent with a car crash.
Federal authorities opened an investigation of the death in September.
One of three troopers named in the family’s suit was suspended but returned to duty; another died in a car crash just hours, the AP said, after he was told he was being fired in connection with the Greene case; and a third was arrested in February in a separate case involving excessive force.
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“There’s no words for how mad I am,” his mother, Mona Hardin, told CNN. “I’m disgusted. They took pleasure in torturing my son.”
Police-involved deaths have received intense scrutiny since the death a year ago of George Floyd in Minneapolis. In that case as well, video told a far different story from the initial police account.
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