Black Swim Team Member Suing Police for Putting Gun to His Head After Mistaking Him for Suspect and Continuing to Detain Him After Realizing They Were Wrong

Bulter

The Roots

In today’s episode of Sh**t Black People Can’t Do Without Being Harassed and Brutalized we’ll be adding to the list: rest.

According to WGN9, the ACLU of Illinois filed a federal lawsuit against six officers from several departments in the Quad Cities area on behalf of Jaylan Butler, a member of Eastern Illinois University’s swim team, over an incident that occurred just under a year ago in February 2019.

According to the suit, on Feb. 24, 2019, Butler was traveling with his team by bus from South Dakota.

“Shortly after 8 p.m., the bus pulled over on a frontage road off Interstate 80 near East Moline, Illinois. Jaylan and several teammates left the bus to stretch their legs,” according to the ACLU’s statement.

Butler and his teammates were taking selfies by road signs and otherwise minding their own damn business when, according to the suit, police surrounded the area with guns drawn and one officer put a gun to Butler’s head.

According to the statement, Butler “put his hands up, dropped his cell phone, and dropped to his knees. … While one officer handcuffed him, other officers pinned him to the ground by pushing a knee into Jaylan’s back and pressing down on Jaylan’s neck. Another officer then held his gun to Jaylan’s forehead and threatened to ‘blow his [expletive] head off’ if he moved.”

The statement continues saying that the team’s bus driver and Jaylan’s coach exited the bus to tell the officers Jaylan was part of the EIU swim team.

“The officers quickly realized that Jaylan was not the suspect they were looking for and had done nothing wrong, but instead of releasing him and apologizing, the officers searched his pockets and placed him — still cuffed — in the back of a police vehicle. After several more minutes, the officers released him, but only after forcing Jaylan to provide photo identification.”

From WGN: Butler is suing officers from the Hampton Police Department, the East Moline Police Department, and the Rock Island County Sheriff’s Office for false arrest, excessive detention, and excessive use of force.

     The case is pending in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of Illinois.

     The Rock Island County State’s Attorney is defending two deputies named in the lawsuit.

     The office did not respond to WGN News’s request for comment.

According to NBC Chicago, Butler, who was 19 at the time of the incident, told The Dispatch Rock Island Argus, “My dad taught me at a young age what to do when you are stopped by police officers – stop instantly, put your hands up, drop anything you are holding, and drop to your knees. I hoped I would never have to use this advice in my life, but all that changed in seconds.”

Bus driver Todd Slingerland also spoke to reporters for Dispatch-Argus about the incident.

“I was sitting in the driver’s seat, waiting for the parents to get there, and Jaylan was the last one to get back on the bus,” Slingerland said. “A car screamed in, and I jumped out of the bus, knowing something was going down that shouldn’t be going down.

“As I got out, a second police car came screaming in.”

“The one officer was telling Jaylan they were going to arrest him for resisting, but how could they arrest him for something he hadn’t done?” Slingerland asked. “Their excuse (for taking Butler into custody) was that they thought the bus was being held, hostage.

“I had all the lights on, so the bus was lit up. The bus had EIU on the side, and Jaylan was wearing an EIU jacket. I told them to get the sheriff over there because this was a very big mistake.

“They said the sheriff was busy with an active-shooter event.”

What the suspect the cops were looking for had done to prompt the rush to action on Butler is unclear. How (Sway) the officers mistook a man wearing his swim team’s uniform jacket and standing next to a bust with the team’s logo plastered on it for their suspect is also unknown. What is known is the damage police have done to their unsuspecting victim.

The ACLU says Butler started seeing a therapist to address trauma and depression he’s endured following the incident.

“I was scared and depressed. I remember sitting in class the next day, looking at the bruises on my wrists and replaying the events of that night,” said Jaylan. “Now whenever I see a police officer, I don’t feel safe—I feel scared and anxious.”

God, I hope Butler wins. I’m so tired.

About Carma Henry 24455 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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