Timothy Bella
WARNING: THIS ARTICLE CONTAINS DISTURBING VIDEO FOOTAGE
Caron Nazario had his arms raised in fear from the window of his newly-purchased SUV when two police officers held the army second lieutenant at gunpoint during a traffic stop in Windsor, Virginia.
Nazario was confused as to why police were yelling for him to exit the car last December for not having a permanent rear licence plate, according to a federal lawsuit filed this month.
When Nazario told police on December 5, 2020, that he was "honestly afraid to get out" of the car, the officer replied, "Yeah, you should be!"
From there, body-cam footage shows police pepper-spraying, striking and handcuffing the 27-year-old Army officer, and using a slang term suggesting that he would face execution. The lawsuit claims police also threatened to end Nazario's military career if he spoke out about the incident.
"I'm serving this country, and this is how I'm treated?" said Nazario, who is black and Latino, according to body-cam video.
Nazario filed a lawsuit this month against Windsor officers Joe Gutierrez and Daniel Crocker over excessive force that the lieutenant claims was due to racial profiling. The federal lawsuit obtained by The Washington Post, which was filed in the Eastern District of Virginia on April 2, is seeking at least $1 million in damages and for the court to rule that Gutierrez and Crocker violated his constitutional rights, specifically the Fourth Amendment.
"Short of people getting murdered, it's the most egregious conduct I've seen on film by police," Jonathan Arthur, Nazario's attorney, said to The Post.
Black Army officer held at gunpoint in his car: “I’m honestly afraid to get out.”
— Qasim Rashid, Esq. قاسم رشید (@QasimRashid) April 10, 2021
Cop: “Yeah, you should be.”
Cops then pepper sprayed, beat, & handcuffed Army LT Caron Nazario was while in uniform... then let him go😐
Horrific police violencepic.twitter.com/XMcGHXVKc8
Neither Windsor Police Chief Rodney Riddle nor Mayor Glynn Willis immediately returned requests for comment Saturday. A town manager told the Virginian Pilot that Gutierrez and Crocker still work for the police department.
The lawsuit comes as the nation continues to deal with incidents of excessive force involving police and people of colour. In Virginia, the state last year passed a slew of criminal justice reforms last year that addressed policing. New laws took effect last month to limit the use of deadly force by police in Virginia, including a ban on certain dangerous policing tactics that have been a focal point of discussion during the trial of Derek Chauvin for the death of George Floyd.
The body-cam footage of the incident went viral over the weekend, with Nazario's name trending on Twitter into Saturday. "These cameras captured footage of behaviour consistent with a disgusting nationwide trend of law enforcement officers, who, believing they can operate with complete impunity, engage in unprofessional, discourteous, racially biased, dangerous and sometimes deadly abuses of authority," the lawsuit said.
According to the complaint, Nazario was still in uniform when he was driving home from work at the US Army Medical Corps on December 5. His Chevrolet Tahoe was so new that the Department of Motor Vehicles hadn't given Nazario new permanent plates, so he had cardboard temporary plates taped to the inside of the vehicle. Body-cam footage of the night shows that the temporary tags were visible on the car.
Crocker initiated a traffic stop on Route 460 at around 6:30pm due to Nazario lacking a rear licence plate, not seeing the temporary plate in the car window, the lawsuit claims. He was soon joined by Gutierrez. Not wanting to pull over in the dark on a busy road, Nazario slowed down and pulled into a well-lit BP gas station, which took less than two minutes, Arthur said. By doing this manoeuvre, one that police later said "happens all the time," Gutierrez told authorities that his training and experience indicated to him that Nazario was "almost certainly" a minority, according to the lawsuit.
But that didn't stop the officers from considering this a "felony traffic stop," causing them to draw their weapons and demanding Nazario "obey" their order to get out of the car. Seeing that the situation had escalated, Nazario hit record on his phone and set it on the dashboard of his car.
"What's going on?" Nazario calmly asked the officers, not answering his question.
"You're fixin' to ride the lightning, son," Gutierrez said, according to Nazario's cellphone video, invoking a colloquial term for execution by electrocution. The line was most famously referenced in the movie "The Green Mile," a film about a Black man facing execution.
Shortly after police refused to say why they had their guns drawn on Nazario, they pepper-sprayed him multiple times, according to video.
"This is f----- up, this is f----- up," Nazario said, adding that he was trying to breathe. "This is really messed up."
When a blinded Nazario struggled to take off his seat belt and exit the car, Gutierrez said to him, "You made this way more difficult than it had to be if you just complied!"
Then, Nazario got out of the car and asked for their supervisor. In response, and out of the video's field of view, Gutierrez delivered "knee strikes" to the army officer's legs, which knocked him to the ground, the lawsuit claims. Nazario's attorney says the two officers proceeded to hit the lieutenant some more before handcuffing him.
During the encounter, Gutierrez could be heard saying to Nazario on his body-worn camera, "I get it, the media spewing race relations between law enforcement and minorities, I get it."
According to the lawsuit, the officers threatened to destroy his military career if Nazario spoke out about the incident. Nazario was allegedly told by police that if he would "chill and let this go," then the officers would not press baseless charges of their own against him and would release him, records show.
In an incident report from Gutierrez that's included in the lawsuit, the officer claimed that his decision to release Nazario without charges came from how he didn't want the military to "take punitive actions against him."
"Being a military veteran, I did not want to see his career ruined over one erroneous decision," Gutierrez wrote.
In an interview on Saturday, Arthur, Nazario's attorney, said that his client seeking at least $1 million in damages is meant "to send message to officers that this type of behavior will not be tolerated." Since the encounter with police, Nazario has had recurring nightmares and gets "freaked out" whenever he sees law enforcement, Arthur said.
"It just blows my mind that two officers thought they could get away with it," Arthur said. "He did everything right."