Current:Home > StocksAtlanta City Council approves settlement of $2M for students pulled from car during 2020 protests -ValueMetric
Atlanta City Council approves settlement of $2M for students pulled from car during 2020 protests
View
Date:2025-04-16 01:50:39
ATLANTA (AP) — The Atlanta City Council has approved the payment of a settlement of $2 million to two college students who were shocked with Tasers and pulled from a car while they were stuck in downtown traffic caused by protests over George Floyd’s killing.
The City Council on Monday voted 13-1 to approve the payment to settle a federal lawsuit filed by Messiah Young and Taniyah Pilgrim. The lawsuit filed in June 2021 argued that police had no justification for pulling the two students from their car and shocking them.
Young and Pilgrim were students at historically Black colleges in Atlanta on May 30, 2020, when police confronted them. Video of the confrontation quickly circulated online adding to outrage in a city already roiled by protests.
Then-Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms and then-Police Chief Erika Shields announced the next day that two officers had been fired and three others placed on desk duty. Then-Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard a few days later announced that arrest warrants had been obtained for six officers.
The dismissals of the two officers were overturned in February 2021 after the Atlanta Civil Service Board found the city did not follow its own personnel procedures. And the charges against the six officers were dropped in May 2022 by a special prosecutor assigned to the case.
The resolution approved by the council Monday says any settlement is not to be considered an admission of liability.
Lawyers for Pilgrim and Young applauded the city for agreeing to settlement.
“This traumatic incident has left a permanent mental and emotional scar on both of these young adults,” Pilgrim’s lawyers, Dianna Lee, L. Chris Stewart and Justin Miller, said in a statement. “This case has been a roller coaster of emotions for two innocent college students who were the victims of unjustifiable excessive force by officers of the APD.”
“The resolution of the civil case will allow these young people and their families to continue healing from this traumatic experience,” attorney Mawuli Davis, a lawyer for Young said, adding, “It is important for them to help the community to remember that the fight to prevent police brutality continues.”
Police released dramatic body camera the night after the confrontation.
It shows another young man saying he didn’t do anything and pleading with officers to let him go as they take him into custody in the midst of a traffic jam in a downtown street.
Young, seated in the driver’s seat of a car stopped in the street, appears to be shooting video with his phone as an officer approaches and yanks open the driver’s side door. Young pulls the door closed and urges officers to release the other man and let him get in the car.
The car driven by Young gets stuck in traffic and officers run up to both sides of the car shouting orders. An officer uses a Taser on Pilgrim as she tries to exit 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 finally manages to break it.
As the glass shatters, an officer uses a Taser on Young and officers pull him from the car, some shouting, “Get your hand out of your pockets,” and, “He got a gun. He got a gun. He got a gun.” Once Young’s out of the car and on the ground, officers zip tie his hands behind his back and lead him away.
Police reports did not list a gun as having been recovered.
veryGood! (53)
Related
- Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
- Aftershock rattles Morocco as death toll from earthquake rises to 2,100
- Senate committee to vote on Wisconsin’s top elections official as Republicans look to fire her
- Lose Yourself in the Nostalgia of the 2003 MTV VMAs
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- We unpack Jimmy Fallon and the 'Strike Force Five' podcast
- US moves to advance prisoner swap deal with Iran and release $6 billion in frozen Iranian funds
- Josh Duhamel and Wife Audra Mari Duhamel Expecting First Baby Together
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Chuck Todd signs off as host of NBC's 'Meet the Press': 'The honor of my professional life'
Ranking
- Big Lots store closures could exceed 300 nationwide, discount chain reveals in filing
- Dog walker struck by lightning along Boston beach, critically hospitalized
- Explosion at Archer Daniels Midland plant in Illinois injures 8 workers
- Get a Front Row Seat to Heidi Klum's Fashion Week Advice for Daughter Leni Klum
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- How to help those affected by the Morocco earthquake
- We unpack Jimmy Fallon and the 'Strike Force Five' podcast
- Man walks into FBI office to confess to killing, raping woman in 1979
Recommendation
Jury selection set for Monday for ex-politician accused of killing Las Vegas investigative reporter
Kamala Harris says GOP claims that Democrats support abortion up until birth are mischaracterization
Houston Rockets guard Kevin Porter Jr. charged with assaulting girlfriend at Manhattan hotel
Photos from Morocco earthquake zone show widespread devastation
Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
What to know about a major rescue underway to bring a US researcher out of a deep Turkish cave
Country singer-songwriter Charlie Robison dies at 59 after suffering cardiac arrest
DraftKings apologizes for sports betting offer referencing 9/11 terror attacks