Provincial Complaints Commission overseeing excessive force complaint against RPS officer - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Provincial Complaints Commission overseeing excessive force complaint against RPS officer

A Regina Police Service officer is being investigated, under the guidance of the Provincial Complaints Commission, after an arrest caught on video appeared to involve an RPS officer dropping a knee on a grounded suspect multiple times.

Arrest caught on camera early Friday morning appears to show an officer drop a knee on grounded suspect

A still from a video that appears to show a police officer, on the left of the screen, running toward three other officers who are in the process of making an arrest. The officer appears to strike the person on the ground with his knee several times. (Lucifer Morningstar/YouTube)

Carmel Crowchild says she had no problem with howRegina Police Service officers caught on camera making an arrest early Friday conducted themselves until the violence escalated.

The video shows RPS members chasing down a person who was fleeing before pushing the man to the ground and gaining control of the situation.

The video which has since been taken down shows two officers holding the man on the ground, a third watchingwithout taking any further actionand then a fourth officer joiningthe fray and immediately appearing to drop a knee onto the grounded suspect multiple times.

"That sickened me. I was upset. I was concerned for his well-being," Crowchild recalled. "I even questioned if he was alive."

Two videos wereposted to a neighbourhood watch Facebook group that Crowchild is a member of. The video is from a home in the Washington Park neighbourhood and captured the moments before, during and after the arrest.

Crowchild said she understands that police have a valuable role to fill and that the job can be stressful but she thinks what she saw was excessive force from the officer.

She filed a complaint with the Regina Police Service after obtaining advice from a lawyer and the Saskatchewan Coalition Against Racism.

Crowchild said she inquired about the man and was told he had received medical attention, was still alive and was still in custody.

"I believe the arrest was cleanright up until that cop did the knee drop."

Video taken from a home in the Washington Park neighbourhood appears to capture the moments before, during and after the Dec. 13 arrest of Rocky Lonechild. (Lucifer Morningstar/YouTube)

The RPS' Professional Standards section is aware of the video, according to spokesperson Elizabeth Popowich.

She said, in an emailed statement, that any time there is concerned expressed about RPS conduct, the provincial complaints commission is notified. An investigation will take place, under the direction of the PCC.

"Itis important for the public to understand that police officers can use force to effect an arrest, but the force applied has to be reasonable and justified," Popowich said.

She said the officer will have to explain the use of force and that every time an officer uses force while on the job, is reviewed by the use-of-force review board, regardless of whether or not a complaint is filed.