Atlanta Officers Fired in ‘Excessive Force’ Arrests File Lawsuit Asking for Jobs Back

Atlanta Officers Fired in ‘Excessive Force’ Arrests File Lawsuit Asking for Jobs Back
Ivory Streeter (L) and Mark Gardner, the two fired officers. Fulton County Sheriff’s Office via AP
Isabel van Brugen
Updated:

Two Atlanta police officers who were charged with assault after using excessive force during the arrest of two college students during protests last month are trying to get their jobs back, according to a lawsuit filed June 8.

The two offending officers, Ivory Streeter and Mark Gardner, were seen in downtown Atlanta breaking the windows of a vehicle before using a stun gun on a man and pulling out a woman.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced on May 31 that the pair would be fired immediately after she and police Chief Erika Shields reviewed body camera footage of the incident, which was widely circulated online.

“Use of excessive force is never acceptable,” Bottoms told reporters, while Shields called the footage “really shocking to watch.”

The lawsuit, filed by the two police officers in Fulton County State Court Monday, states that their use of force was “proper” and lawful, and that they were both denied due process. It asks for back pay and the reinstatement of both Streeter and Gardner.

“Petitioners have suffered irreparable injury to their personal and professional reputations as a result of their unlawful dismissal,” the lawsuit states.

“We filed for a writ of mandamus against the mayor and chief to force them to return my clients to work. The city violated a lot of procedures and their rights,” their attorney Lance LoRusso told FOX 5.
Streeter was hired as a investigator in December 2003, and Gardner was hired in August 1997. Both worked with the Atlanta Police Department’s fugitive unit, NBC News reported.
People clean up damage to CNN Center following an overnight demonstration over the Minneapolis death of George Floyd while in police custody in Atlanta, Georgia, on May 30, 2020. (Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images)
People clean up damage to CNN Center following an overnight demonstration over the Minneapolis death of George Floyd while in police custody in Atlanta, Georgia, on May 30, 2020. Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images

Dramatic video footage showed officers forcibly pulling college students Taniyah Pilgrim and Messiah Young from their vehicle on the evening of May 30, during protests over the May 25 death of George Floyd—the 46-year-old Minneapolis man who died while in police custody after an officer knelt on his neck.

An officer uses a stun gun on Pilgrim as she’s trying to get out of the car and then officers pull her from the vehicle. Another officer yells at Young to put the car in park and open the window. An officer repeatedly hits the driver’s side window with a baton, and another officer finally manages to break it.

As the glass shatters, an officer uses a stun gun on Young and officers pull him from the car as officers shout, “Get your hand out of your pockets,” and: “He got a gun. He got a gun. He got a gun.” Once he’s out of the car and on the ground, officers zip tie Young’s hands behind his back and lead him away.

Police reports do not list a gun as having been recovered.

A further four officers were charged in the incident: Lonnie Hood, Willie Sauls, Armond Jones, and Roland Claud. The charges include aggravated assault of Young, aggravated assault of Pilgrim, simple battery, and criminal damage to property, Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard said on June 2.

Howard added that the students involved were “innocent,” and that an “investigation concluded they were so innocent almost to the point of being naive.”

“The conduct in this incident isn’t indicative of the way we treat people in the city of Atlanta and it certainly isn’t indicative of how we treat our children,” he said last week, without elaborating.

Jack Phillips and The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Isabel van Brugen
Isabel van Brugen
Reporter
Isabel van Brugen is an award-winning journalist. She holds a master's in newspaper journalism from City, University of London.
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