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Miami Police Move to Fire Officer Who Struck Woman in Face Miami Police Officer Faces Discipline After Punching Woman in Face
(about 3 hours later)
The Miami-Dade Police Department said on Thursday that it was moving to fire an officer who hit a woman in the face one day earlier in an episode that was recorded on body camera footage. A police officer in Miami is facing discipline after punching a woman in the face in an episode that was recorded on body camera footage, according to Alfredo Ramirez, the director of the Miami-Dade Police Department.
“As a result of an administrative investigation into the officer’s conduct during this incident; it is my intent to proceed with the termination of the involved officer’s employment with the Miami-Dade Police Department,” Alfredo Ramirez, the director of the Miami-Dade Police Department, said in a statement posted on Twitter on Thursday evening. “The administrative process to proceed with termination has been initiated.” Mr. Ramirez appeared to be referring to a video circulated on Twitter by Billy Corben, a filmmaker, that showed a woman arguing with two officers at what Mr. Corben said was Miami International Airport on Wednesday. The woman stood inches away from one of the officers before he punched her forcefully on her left cheek, sending her hurtling backward.
Mr. Ramirez, who did not publicly identify the officer, appeared to be referring to a video circulated on Twitter by Billy Corben, a filmmaker, that showed a woman arguing with two officers at what Mr. Corben said was Miami International Airport on Wednesday. The woman stood inches away from one of the officers before he struck her forcefully on her left cheek, sending her hurtling backward.
He then pushed her to the ground as officers converged on her, and one can be seen getting out his handcuffs.He then pushed her to the ground as officers converged on her, and one can be seen getting out his handcuffs.
“She head-butted me,” one officer can be heard saying, though the video does not show a head-butt.“She head-butted me,” one officer can be heard saying, though the video does not show a head-butt.
The same video was obtained by The Miami Herald.The same video was obtained by The Miami Herald.
On Wednesday, Mr. Ramirez said in a statement that he was “shocked and angered” and had ordered that the “involved officers be relieved of duty.” As of Thursday morning, however, only one officer had been prohibited from working or having any contact with the public, according Chris Thomas, a spokesman for the Miami-Dade Police Department. Mr. Ramirez said in a statement that he was “shocked and angered” and had ordered that the “involved officers be relieved of duty.” It was not immediately clear whether that meant the officers would be suspended or fired, or how many officers were involved.
“Actions such as these undermine the hard work that we have invested in our community and causes my heart to break for our community and for the vast majority of our officers who dedicate their lives to serving our County,” Mr. Ramirez wrote on Twitter. He added that he wanted to “assure our community that any officer” acting in this way “will be held to account.” “Actions such as these undermine the hard work that we have invested in our community and causes my heart to break for our community and for the vast majority of our officers who dedicate their lives to serving our County,” he said. He added that he wanted to “assure our community that any officer” acting in this way “will be held to account.”
He said he had asked the Miami-Dade state attorney, Katherine Fernandez Rundle, to “immediately become involved in the investigation.”He said he had asked the Miami-Dade state attorney, Katherine Fernandez Rundle, to “immediately become involved in the investigation.”
The mayor of Miami-Dade County, Carlos A. Gimenez, said on Twitter that the conduct was “appalling” and not what officers were trained to do.The mayor of Miami-Dade County, Carlos A. Gimenez, said on Twitter that the conduct was “appalling” and not what officers were trained to do.
“It’s excessive use of force and unnecessary,” he said.“It’s excessive use of force and unnecessary,” he said.
Steadman Stahl, the president of the South Florida Police Benevolent Association, which represents the officer in the video, criticized the department for taking the disciplinary action.
Mr. Stahl said the officer slapped the woman as a “distractionary tactic.”
“Could he have tackled her? Yes. But we’re second-guessing him,” Mr. Stahl said in an interview on Friday. “It was an openhanded slap to distract her and it worked.”
Heather Murphy contributed reporting.