Post navigation

Prev: (09/25/12) | Next: (09/26/12)

Investigation: Cop’s ‘physical contact’ with suspect after officer wife injured in SCCC melee

Seattle Police have launched an internal investigation after a K9 officer rushed to the Seattle Central campus scene of an assault on a female officer Monday night and, infuriated that she had been injured, “made brief physical contact” with the handcuffed suspect who had already been taken into custody. According to an SPD brief posted on the incident, the officer who was pushed to the ground and injured is the K9 officer’s wife.


CHS learned of the 9:46p melee late Monday night but could not confirm details with SPD until the report was posted Tuesday evening.

Seattle Fire tells CHS a medic unit responded to 12th and Pine’s East Precinct headquarters following the fight to treat a man in his 20s for head and facial injuries. The injuries were not considered serious and the unit left within 15 minutes, according to Seattle Fire.

According to the SPD report, officers were called to SCCC to a report of a woman passed out near the Broadway Performance Hall just before 10p Monday. They arrived to find a group of two men and a woman passing around a bottle of alcohol. As the two police officers contacted the drinkers and asked for ID, the two males became unruly and attempted to walk away. The female officer grabbed one of the males by the backpack to keep him from leaving at which point he pushed her and punched her in the face, according to the report. The officers ended up having to “wrestle the suspect into handcuffs” as he fought to escape. “During the struggle,” the report states, “the female officer struck her head on either the ground or the stairwell.  It took both officers about four minutes to finally get the man in handcuffs.”

Here is how the SPD report documents what came next:

At this point, the female officer’s husband, an on duty SPD K9 officer, arrived.  Seeing that his wife had been injured, he approached the suspect and made brief physical contact with him. Two officers closest to him immediately separated him and kept him away from the suspect.

The female officer received on scene treatment from SFD.  She received additional care at a local hospital for her head injury and abrasions to her hands and knees. The male officer declined medical treatment.

According to SPD, the K9 officer has been placed on administrative reassignment as the OPA review of his actions takes place.

The suspect was taken to East Precinct where he received medical treatment and was booked into jail for investigation of assault.

The area around Broadway and Pine and Cal Anderson has been designated for increased SPD patrols to help curb illegal activities in the area. The community college has also recently transitioned to employing 24-hour security patrols to help curb crime around the campus. Meanwhile, SPD is in the middle of a process to overhaul its practices in the wake of the Department of Justice consent decree.

The full SPD report on the incident is below:

A man drinking Fireball whiskey and toting a backpack containing marijuana assaulted two East Precinct officers responding to a call at Seattle Central Community College (SCCC) last night.

The incident began when SPD received a call from the Seattle Fire Department at 9:46 p.m. that a woman was passed out in front of the college. The officers, a man and a woman, drove down Broadway but didn’t see anyone. They parked their car and got out to check on foot. Upon walking towards the SCCC Performance Hall they noticed three men and a woman passing around a ¾ empty open bottle of Fireball whiskey.

The male officer asked one of the men, a 29-year old, for his ID. The other man who had been holding the bottle, a 23-year old, then began to walk away. The male officer told the 23-year old to stay. While his attention was focused on the 23-year old, the 29-year old began to walk away. The male officer redirected his attention to the 29-year old and the female officer focused on the 23-year old. The 23-year old then began walking away from the female officer.

The female officer grabbed the man’s backpack strap to prevent him from leaving. He then turned towards her, pushed her and punched her in the face. At this point, both officers tried to physically arrest the man but he kept fighting with them. He managed to punch the male officer in the face as well and eventually the melee went to the ground with the officers attempting to wrestle the suspect into handcuffs and the suspect fighting to escape.

During the struggle, the female officer struck her head on either the ground or the stairwell.  It took both officers about four minutes to finally get the man in handcuffs.

At this point, the female officer’s husband, an on duty SPD K9 officer, arrived.  Seeing that his wife had been injured, he approached the suspect and made brief physical contact with him. Two officers closest to him immediately separated him and kept him away from the suspect.

The female officer received on scene treatment from SFD.  She received additional care at a local hospital for her head injury and abrasions to her hands and knees. The male officer declined medical treatment.

The suspect was transported to the East Precinct where he received treatment from SFD. A search of his backpack revealed a plastic bag containing about 3.8 grams of suspected marijuana. The suspect received additional treatment at Harborview and was booked into King County Jail for Investigation of Assault.

Officers at the scene including the K9 officer notified their chains of command disclosing the contact made with the suspect. An Office of Professional Accountability (OPA) complaint has been filed and the case is currently under investigation. The K9 officer has been placed on administrative reassignment. Per department policy, he is not being named.

The bottle of Fireball whiskey and the suspected marijuana were placed into evidence.

The disposition of the other two people contacted prior to the melee is not known.

The department’s investigation into the incident continues.

Subscribe and support CHS Contributors -- $1/$5/$10 per month

23 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Taxpayer
11 years ago

While it probably will cost him his badge, I can certainly understand the emotion that caused the K9 officer to react that way. The asswipe who received the “brief contact” surely deserved it. I for one am tired of being harassed by the aggressive street punks and drunks in that area, and I appreciate the efforts by SPD to help make things better for those of us who want a liveable neighborhood.

SoMad
11 years ago

In a way, what happened here seems to show some evidence that rules and procedure are being followed. Totally understandable that the husband of the officer acted as he did…and then it’s good to know that other officers separated them and did their due diligence in reporting to the chain of command.

Brad
Brad
11 years ago

The contact by the officer was brief, he pushed the suspect who was loud and unruly, and said something like “oh you like to hit women?”. Then the other officers pushed the officer away and the suspect kept struggling, swearing and trying to contact the officers. Too bad the suspect will probably be out on the street being a general miscreant again soon.

g
g
11 years ago

good for the cop.

bb
bb
11 years ago

I hope this loser is harassed by every cop that sees him for a good long time. I would have had the dog chew his balls off so that he can’t breed.

MFS
MFS
11 years ago

sometimes physical contact and strong words are the only way to strike a chord in the hearts of apathetic, volatile, violent arseholes.

good job, Officer.

JS
JS
11 years ago

I love the outpour of support for the officer who attacked a detained suspect who is being unruly. But whenever officers get involved with protesters who are being unruly it’s unjust and unfair. Got it.

That said, if it was my wife I would’ve had a lot more than brief contact with this asshole.

lifeguard
11 years ago

If the K9 officer is ever involved in a lawsuit for abusing prisoners, the city will pay through the nose.

This is not excusable and an insult to professional police who follow their training and obey the law.

In America judges are supposed to dispense punishments, not police or other members of the executive branch.

genevieve
genevieve
11 years ago

Disagree.

While it is understandable on a human level for a person to feel this way about seeing his spouse injured, they are both POLICE OFFICERS. It’s a high risk job. Officers are supposed to react to incidents based on what transpired, not who the people involved are. Not to mention that it undermines the female officer’s authority to have her husband swoop in to protect her like some frat jock.

I don’t have any sympathies for the jackasses drinking in the park, but that doesn’t excuse this officer’s behavior.

lifeguard
11 years ago

Good thing you will never wear a badge & a gun.

David
David
11 years ago

I would have done the same. I’m SO SICK AND TIRED of every crazy violent drunk drugged up douche bag on Capital Hill being hailed as a “victim” when they do something wrong. This douche was drunk carrying open bottle of whiskey in public (bad guy). He didn’t follow the police orders (bad guy). He punched female cop in the face and then fought with them (bad guy). He’s NOT THE F**KING victim. I would have kicked the crap out of him if he attached my partner. I’m tired of these violent drunk/drugged up young straight boys ruining Capital Hill, then every time they get in a fight with the cops THEY’RE the victim, BULLSHIT.

David
David
11 years ago

If the cops stop you, you do what they say. You can “explain” in polite terms what your position is, but if they insist on detaining or arresting you, you NEVER EVER EVER EVER EVER have the right to “punch” or attack them, if you DO you SHOULD expect to be physically restrained. You NEVER fight physically with the cops. You explain to the judge and/or lawyer the situation and if the cops were clearly in the wrong the issue is dismissed and you go on your way, or you sue them or whatnot…but you NEVER have the right to punch a cop in the face and then WHINE about how you scuffed your knee as they wrestled you to the ground and you fought them for 4 minutes. What a scum bag.

The WORST part of this douche and the professional victims that defend this behavior, is it MINIMIZES REAL police misconduct. Then when ACTUAL misconduct occurs (like pepper spraying folks who are sitting peacefully or just sitting in a car) people tend to dismiss that because they remember folks complaining about the cops in situations like this when someone douche drunk punches a female cop and is then somehow the “victim”(tm).

eballer
11 years ago

Well, I would’ve made extended contact with his asshole.

JimS.
11 years ago

Nobody excused his behavior.

JimS.
11 years ago

Well put. Too bad there isn’t some kind of “point system”, wherein every additional infraction the so-called victim continues to make after the arrest starts thereby negates or justifies an appropriate response by the cops. Punch a cop? Cop punches you back– no further charges against the cop. Cop punches you first? You punch him back, no charges against you. At the end of the whole ordeal, all you have left is the original infraction.

genevieve
genevieve
11 years ago

you’re right, everyone else is celebrating the behavior rather than excusing it.

JimS.
11 years ago

The cops have not excused it. That’s the important part.

Damn right the rest of us will celebrate it. The smart-assed little fucktard is lucky all he got was a shove.

calhoun
calhoun
11 years ago

For those who want to make this into a “police brutality” incident, please note eyewitness Brad’s account above. A push or two by the officer, and perhaps a few strong words, is not very serious.

The gutter punk who was arrested deserves to be prosecuted to the full extent of the law, and deserves no synmpathy whatsoever.

JimmyCap
JimmyCap
11 years ago

The suspect hits the female cop, he goes to jail. The cop’s husband hits the suspect, he goes home and is placed on administrative leave. Uh huh. And people wonder why the DOJ had to get involved.

Ron Williams - Seattle Action Network

Hello everyone.

My name is Ron Williams of The Seattle Action Network. I’m the guy that sells candy and soda near SCCC. (in hopes of raising enough to open a full time walk-in day job facility).

I’ve been working at 3rd and Virginia and on Capitol Hill for almost 2 years now trying to stop this nonsense. My small 1 man organization was designed to discourage youth and others from alcohol, drugs, violence, etc.- I work to help them become more productive citizens.

I have encouraged quite a few homeless people in the Capitol Hill/Cal Anderson park area to give up drugs, alcohol and lose the ‘weapons'(knives,axes,etc) and stop the violence. I also help them get temp day jobs where they will get paid the same day(mowing yards, painting, moving,etc). For the ones that want to work.

I also work to end the gang-related violence in Seattle and South King County.

For almost 2 years now I have seen Capitol Hill become more and more of a serious problem area.(now more SPD patrol, 24 SCCC security)

There are ways that we all can work together to discourage this type behaviour.

I work very hard daily to find solutions to help everyone who may live on the streets.

Thanks for reading –

http://www.SeattleActionNetwork.com

JimS.
11 years ago

Another reading comprehension FAIL. Read everyone’s comments. The cop did not hit the suspect.

pikeurchin
pikeurchin
11 years ago

Two people you should never touch, umpires and cops.

trackback

[…] reported on the initial investigation into the incident here. The suspect, John Ross, was treated for head and facial injuries by Seattle […]