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JADARRIUS ROSE being attacked by Police dog in circleville ohio
A Circleville, Ohio, officer who was seen on video deploying a police K-9 that attacked an unarmed Black man while he was surrendering to authorities is on paid administrative leave as the incident is under investigation, the mayor said.
Jadarrius Rose, 23, was bitten by a Circleville police dog on July 4 following a lengthy vehicle pursuit that began as officers attempted to pull over a commercial semi-truck police say failed to stop for an inspection, according to the highway patrol case report and footage released by the agency.
Mayor Don McIlroy on Monday identified the Circleville officer who deployed the dog as Ryan Speakman. He has been placed on paid administrative leave, the mayor told CNN.
The incident is being investigated by a use of force review board, whose findings are expected to be released next week, the mayor and Police Chief G. Shawn Baer said in a joint statement Friday.
The statement confirmed the Circleville Police Department “was involved in a mutual aid request by the Ohio State Highway Patrol” after the driver of a semi-truck refused to stop and the K-9 unit responded to assist.
The police union representing Speakman said it “patiently awaits the outcome” of Circleville’s investigation before it gives a further statement. Ohio Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association Senior Counsel Joseph Hegedus is representing the officer, according to a statement by Tom Austin, the union’s executive director.
Mitchell Christian, a certified police and military K-9 instructor who reviewed dashcam and body camera videos from the incident, said Speakman’s decision to deploy the dog onto a surrendering person was “not indicative to what a canine handler should do in that scenario.”
“The handler should be able to look at that guy and know he’s not a threat. You wouldn’t Tase a guy who was sitting there with his hands up,” Christian, who is the owner and head trainer at Christian K-9 Academy in West Jefferson, Ohio, told CNN.
Police dogs are not trained to kill or have “life-altering effects,” Christian said. They are trained to help officers apprehend a suspect safely and their level of force can be compared to that of a Taser, he added.
“I will say it’s probably not a good example for a K-9 handler’s decision-making skills there because I would say most handlers out there would choose not to deploy the dog on a guy who’s clearly trying to give up, at that point,” Christian continued. “Ultimately, it’s always the handler’s decision whether to deploy the dog or not.”
The vehicle pursuit began after a Motor Carrier Enforcement inspector tried to stop the semi-truck, which was traveling west on US 35 in Jackson County, Ohio, due to a missing mud flap, according to the Highway Patrol case report.
But when the inspector turned on the lights on his marked patrol vehicle, the “suspect vehicle continued west on US 35,” the report says, noting the driver made eye contact with the inspector.
When the driver – identified as Rose – failed to stop, the inspector notified dispatch to send a marked patrol unit to assist, the case report says.
During the police chase, Rose told emergency dispatchers that officers were “trying to kill” him and he did “not feel safe” pulling over the truck, according to recordings of Rose’s 911 calls released by the Ross County Sheriff’s Office.
The video shows authorities pursuing the semi-truck, which appeared to initially slow down and stop. As it does, the footage shows an officer getting out of a vehicle, pointing a weapon toward the truck and ordering the driver to get out. The driver does not exit the vehicle, however, and starts driving again. Multiple law enforcement vehicles are shown joining the chase, the footage shows.
The driver eventually stops the semi-truck and gets out of the vehicle surrounded by several police cars and officers, the video shows, before cutting to what appears to be a state trooper getting out of his vehicle and walking toward the driver.
“Come to me,” an officer is heard saying to the driver. Another adds, “get on the ground or you’re going to get bit.”
The driver is shown on the road with his hands up.
“Do not release the dog with his hands up,” a state trooper warns several times from a distance, though it is unclear if the state trooper could be heard by other officers.
The case report says Speakman “exited his patrol car and began giving commands to the suspect” before he deployed the K-9 on Rose after repeated warnings from the state trooper, according to the video footage.
The dog runs toward officers and then turns to Rose and attacks him, pulling him to the ground, the video shows. Rose is seen and heard screaming and crying out for the officers to pull the dog off of him, the video shows.
He continues to cry out as officers call out for a first aid kit. Rose was later shown being treated by the officers.
Christian, the K-9 instructor, told CNN Rose appeared “clearly confused” before the dog was deployed in the video footage because he was getting “two different commands from two different officers.”
“I don’t think the dog is lacking the training,” Christian said. “I think it was just a bad deployment.”
Rose was treated and released from a hospital before being taken to the Ross County Jail, according to a case report from the Ohio State Highway Patrol, which notes he faced a charge of failure to comply with order or signal by a police officer, a fourth-degree felony.
He was released from custody July 7, the Ross County Prosecutor’s Office told CNN, adding the office is still collecting evidence before it determines whether to move forward with the charge against him.
#Police K-9 handler who released dog that attacked an unarmed Black man in Ohio placed on paid leave while incident is under review#mayor says#ohio#circleville#k9#k9 units#k9 attacks#dogs biting citizens#police dogs#police dogs attacking#defund k9 units#Jadarrius Rose
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Those whom are convinced that things have gotten better aren't Black and Indigenous, we see no improvement, under the contrary, we see that things have gotten worse.
#black love#black history#black africans#black positivity#black indigenous africans#black indigenous people#aboriginals#first nation people#global black on black love
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Canis denuntiatorum Atrum agitatorem in genibus expugnavit. Urbs Ohionis rem deluctat.
Circleville, Ohio - Jadarrius Rose 18-rotas rusticum per Ohionem agitavit, lutiscutum afuturum oculum denuntiatoris conspectum erat. Iter fit morsu canis in Rose temptatus succumbere.
Hic non primum tempus denuntiatores Circleville cum dubiis de disciplina patefactoque canibus deluctant. Paene 20 annos praeterite, auctor K-9 officium devocavit demissus de superbia. David Haynes in publica caesuram disciplinae canibus domitoribusque de 500 horibus ad 172 horas contratiatus erat.
Consecutio
De visifico Rose non subito agitantem destiterat ut denuntiatores sequebantur. Ubi desistebat, denuntiatores pistoliis extractiis conspexit. 911 vocavit et dixit denuntiatores “interficere eum temptare.” Primo Rose cum felonia accusatus est sed prosecutores calumniam eiicerunt. Documenta aperit Rose misdemeanore accusatus est. Necesse est Rosae quarere auxilium hospitale pro morsibus. Domitor canis, denuntiator Ryan Speakman, demissus est.
Vocabularia
Lutiscutum, ī - mudflap
Superbia, ae - insubordination
Pistolium, ī - gun
Visificus, ī - video
Calumnia, ae - charge/accusation
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Charges May Be Dropped Against Black Driver Who Was Mauled By Police Dog While Surrendering
A prosecutor in Ohio wants a judge to dismiss charges, at least for now, against a Black truck driver who was bitten by a police dog while he was surrendering along a highway last month.
“There is insufficient evidence to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt,” that Jadarrius Rose’s operation of his truck caused a substantial risk of serious physical harm to people or property, attorney Jeffrey C. Marks told Judge Michael Ater Thursday.
Marks emphasized “substantial” and told the judge he may want to refile some of the charges later. An aide to Rose’s lawyer, Benjamin J. Partee, said he declined to comment Monday.
During Rose’s arrest on July 4 near Circleville, recorded by police body cameras, Circleville Police Officer Ryan Speakman let the dog maul Rose while he was on his knees with his hands in the air, as state troopers shouted for Speakman to restrain the animal. Rose, 23, of Memphis, Tennessee, required hospital treatment.
Marks wrote in the motion that after reviewing the footage and police reports, he believes it was a mistake to charge Rose with fleeing after committing a felony. “There appears to be no evidence that the Defendant, on July 4, 2023, was fleeing immediately after the commission of a felony,” Marks wrote.
He wants the judge to dismiss the case while the Chillicothe Law Director’s Office reviews results of the investigation to determine if misdemeanor charges are applicable, and wants the judge to let prosecutors restart the case if warranted. The request remains pending before Ater.
Speakman was placed on leave and then fired from the Circleville force after the agency claimed he “did not meet the standards and expectations we hold for our police officers.” Speakman’s union, the Ohio Patrolman’s Benevolent Association, filed a grievance arguing he was fired without sufficient grounds. -(source: nbc news)
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[ad_1] The Ohio police officer who discharged a dog that mauled 23-year-old Jadarrius Rose has been fired from the department, according to multiple reports.Footage of Circleville K-9 Officer Ryan Speakman releasing the dog on July 4 circulated on social media after it was reported by Scioto Valley Guardian last week.“Officer Speakman did not meet the standards and expectations we hold for our police officers,” Circleville Police said in a statement on Wednesday, according to NBC News. “Officer Speakman has been terminated from the department, effective immediately.” The Ohio Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association, the police union in Ohio, criticized Speakman’s termination. In a post on Facebook, the group claimed Speakman was terminated “contrary to mandatory principles of progressive discipline.”State troopers previously said they were attempting to pull over Rose, who is Black, because of a missing mud flap on the tractor-trailer he was driving down U.S. Route 23 in Ohio. Rose pulled over momentarily before driving off and calling 911, CNN reported, citing recordings of the calls.“I parked the truck and I was about to comply with them, but they all had they guns drawn out for whatever reason,” Rose said in one recording, according to CNN.He told the 911 operator that he feared the officers attempting to pull him over would kill him. One operator urged him to roll down his window.“I did that the last time and all of them had their guns pointed at me. You think I feel safe?” he told the 911 operator, according to NBC News.Rose reportedly continued to drive away from police for roughly 25 minutes, avoiding contact with police tire-deflating spike bars and other efforts by police to stop him. He eventually stopped when spiked bars were placed in front of the moving truck. As shown in body camera footage, Rose had his hands in the air as he exited the truck and proceeded to comply with orders.An officer is heard in the video saying: “Do not, do not let them, don’t release the dog with his hands up.” Speakman can be heard telling Rose, “Get your ass on the ground or you’re going to get bit!” Speakman released the dog and it attacked Rose for over 30 seconds.“Please, please get it off,” Rose was heard saying in the video.Rose endured significant blood loss and was taken to the hospital, The Washington Post reported. He was later taken to jail, and was released on July 7.The Circleville Police Department and Speakman did not immediately respond to HuffPost’s requests for comment. !function(f,b,e,v,n,t,s)if(f.fbq)return;n=f.fbq=function()n.callMethod? n.callMethod.apply(n,arguments):n.queue.push(arguments);if(!f._fbq)f._fbq=n; n.push=n;n.loaded=!0;n.version='2.0';n.queue=[];t=b.createElement(e);t.async=!0; t.src=v;s=b.getElementsByTagName(e)[0]; s.parentNode.insertBefore(t,s)(window,document,'script',' fbq('init', '1621685564716533'); fbq('track', "PageView"); var _fbPartnerID = null; if (_fbPartnerID !== null) fbq('init', _fbPartnerID + ''); fbq('track', "PageView"); [ad_2] Source link
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GOOD!!
"Circleville Police Officer Ryan Speakman’s actions during the review of his canine apprehension of suspect Jadarrius Rose on July 4 show that Officer Speakman did not meet the standards and expectations we hold for our police officers. Officer Speakman has been terminated from the department, effective immediately," the statement said.
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July 26 (Reuters) - Police in Circleville, Ohio, on Wednesday fired an officer who unleashed his dog on a Black man during a highway traffic stop and ordered the animal to attack even though the man had his hands raised, according to video of the incident.
"Officer (Ryan) Speakman did not meet the standards and expectations we hold for our police officers. Officer Speakman has been terminated from the department, effective immediately," police in a statement.
Speakman could not be reached for comment, but the Ohio Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, a police union, said in a statement that Speakman was fired "without JUST CAUSE" and it was filing a grievance on his behalf.
The incident unfolded on July 4 after law enforcement officers engaged in the lengthy pursuit of a semi-tractor trailer driven by Jadarrius Rose, 23. The vehicle was missing a mud flap and it had failed to stop for an inspection, a report from the Ohio State Highway Patrol (OSHP) said.
It came to a halt on a state highway about 40 miles (64 km) south of Columbus after officers deployed tire deflation devices, known as "stop sticks," for a second time.
In a video provided by the highway patrol, Rose is standing by the vehicle with his hands raised as law enforcement officials order him to get on the ground.
Moments later, an officer with the Circleville Police Department unleashed a police dog on Rose even though a state trooper told the local officer not to release the dog.
"Do not release the dog - with his hands up," the trooper can be heard shouting on the video.
The video shows the dog running towards Rose, now on his knees, and appears to show the canine biting and pulling the driver. Rose screams loudly and can be heard saying, "please get it off."
A social media campaign that formed after the story came to light last week has called a protest for Saturday. A Facebook group called Dismantle Circleville Police demanded the dismissal of Speakman and Police Chief Shawn Baer, in addition to dropping all charges against Rose.
Circleville police department declined to comment beyond the statement.
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UPDATE! MAN BITTEN BY POLICE DOG - PROSECUTOR ASKS CHARGES BE DROPPED!
Officer Fired - Not For Turning Dog Loose On Man ––– But For Talking Publicly About It Afterwards!
#black lives matter#aclu#black lgbt#black stories#gay#arizona#black history#cnn#civil rights#civil liberties#civil rights movement#american civil liberties union#black history month#black pride#black people#black tumblr#black women#black man#police violence#lgbt#police assault#police abuse#police attack#police brutality#police crime#black power#black politics#black panther#black love#black podcast
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US-OH: Police officer orders dog to attack unarmed Black man surrendering after highway chase in Ohio [SENSITIVE]
A police officer unleashed a dog and commanded it to attack an unarmed Black man as he surrendered during a traffic stop after a highway chase in Ohio on July 4. A newly released footage by the Ohio State Highway Patrol shows the chase and the moment the driver, identified as 23-year-old Jadarrius Rose, surrendered with his hands in the air and was mauled by a Circleville Police Department…
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The Young Man Attacked By A Police dog In Ohio As He Surrendered Feared He Might Die
The young man who was attacked by a police dog in Ohio as he was trying to surrender says that he was afraid for his life and that it was fear that initially kept him from stopping his vehicle when officials attempted a traffic stop.
“I just didn’t want to lose my life or lose my arm,” Jadarrius Rose told NBC News’ Tom Llamas on “Top Story with Tom Llamas” on Thursday.
Rose, 23, had his hands up when the dog attacked him after a vehicle pursuit July 4, according to an Ohio State Highway Patrol report and body camera video.
Body camera video appears to show a highway patrol trooper yelling “Do not release the dog with his hands up!” before a Circleville police officer releases the dog.
The officer, Ryan Speakman, has been fired, the police department said Wednesday. The Ohio Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association said that Speakman had been terminated without just cause and that a grievance has been filed.
Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representing the family, said in Thursday's interview that what happened on the roadside in Ohio was reminiscent of abuses that occurred during the Civil Rights Movement.
Rose "was on his knees, putting his hands in the air, which is the universal sign of surrender," Crump said. “What more can a Black person do to say that ‘I’m not putting you in fear'?"
Crump said Rose had called 911 saying he was afraid police would kill him.
Audio released by police showed that a dispatcher instructed the caller to roll down his window and that the caller replied: "I did that the last time and all of them had their guns pointed at me. You think I feel safe?"
Rose was charged with failure to comply with an order or signal of a police officer, according to the highway patrol, and he was released on bond. -(source: nbc news)
Stay tuned…
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NBC NEWS: 'Do not release the dog with his hands up!' Black man mauled by police canine after Ohio pursuit
‘Do not release the dog with his hands up!’ Black man mauled by police canine after Ohio pursuit Jadarrius Rose is seen on video during the July 4 traffic stop with his hands up surrendering to police before an officer deploys his canine. Read in NBC News: https://apple.news/A9uS8kqkVSXG84LQMNjYVkg Shared from Apple News Best Wishes and Hugs,Scottie
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[ad_1] A police dog mauled a Black man in Ohio during a July 4th traffic stop after he surrendered to authorities with his hands raised in the air following a "lengthy pursuit," according to officials.A Motor Carrier Enforcement inspector with the Ohio State Highway Patrol (OSHP) attempted to stop 23-year-old Jadarrius Rose who was driving a semi-tractor trailer because it "was missing a left rear mud flap," according to an incident report. Rose was traveling westbound on U.S. Route 35 and failed to stop for the inspector and troopers who were called in for help.Stop sticks were deployed twice on the vehicle before it came to a stop on U.S. Route 23."After several times of being ordered to exit the vehicle, the suspect exited the vehicle from the driver’s side door," the incident report stated. "The driver was given orders to get down on the ground and the suspect would not comply."Rose can be seen on video released by the OSHP standing in front of troopers with his hands in the air.An officer with the Circleville Police Department who has a K9 with him can be heard telling Rose to "go on the ground or you’re gonna get bit." Meanwhile, a trooper with the OSHP is telling Rose to "come to me."It was then that the Circleville Police Department officer, identified as "R. Speakman," deployed his K9."Do not release the dog with his hands up!" a trooper can be heard yelling multiple times ahead of Speakman releasing the dog.The video shows the dog running towards Rose, who came to his knees as Speakman released the K9.Video appears to show the dog biting and pulling Rose by his arm as he screams loudly."Get it off!" Rose screams repeatedly."Get the dog off of him!" a trooper is heard yelling.Other officers on the scene can be heard calling for a first aid kit. Jadarrius Rose is handcuffed after dog was pulled away. (Ohio State Highway Patrol)Rose was eventually taken into custody and "troopers immediately provided first aid and contacted EMS to respond," according to a statement from the OSHP.Story continuesIt's not clear if the officer responsible for directing the dog to attack Rose is facing any disciplinary action.The OSHP clarified that “the canine involved in the incident is from the Circleville Police Department and not the Ohio State Highway Patrol.”"This case remains under investigation and the Patrol is unable to provide any further details at this time," Sgt. Ryan E. Purpura with the OSHP told NBC News.The Circleville Police Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.This article was originally published on NBCNews.com [ad_2]
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