Current:Home > StocksLawyers say a trooper charged at a Philadelphia LGBTQ+ leader as she recorded the traffic stop -LegacyBuild Academy
Lawyers say a trooper charged at a Philadelphia LGBTQ+ leader as she recorded the traffic stop
View
Date:2025-04-21 11:31:14
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — A Philadelphia city official arrested during a traffic stop said she started recording because she feared for her husband’s life as a trooper handcuffed him on a rainy elevated highway.
The trooper then charged at her “like a linebacker,” knocking the cellphone away and ending the recording, her lawyers said Thursday.
“This state trooper held my husband’s life in his hands,” Celena Morrison, who leads the city’s Office of LGBT Affairs, said at a news conference.
“Fearing the worst was about the happen, I yelled out to the trooper, ‘I work for the mayor,’ multiple times, hoping that would make him realize he was dealing with people he did not need to be afraid of,” said Morrison, 51, a top aide to Mayor Cherelle Parker.
She and her husband, Darius McLean, who runs an LGBTQ+ community center in the city, plan to file suit over the traffic stop, which occurred as they drove behind each other to drop off a car for repairs. Their lawyers questioned the trooper’s apparent “warrior” policing tactics.
“What is it about the training that he’s receiving that makes him think that that is an OK way to treat civilians that he is sworn to protect and serve?” lawyer Riley Ross asked.
He also questioned the reason for the stop, saying the trooper would not have had time to run the registration before he wedged between them and pulled Morrison over. The trooper, on the video, said he stopped her for tailgating and failing to have her lights on.
Morrison believes she was targeted for being Black. The trooper has not been identified by state police but has been put on limited duty amid the investigation.
The couple was detained for about 12 hours on obstruction and resisting arrest charges following the 9 a.m. stop Saturday, but District Attorney Larry Krasner has not yet determined whether he will file the charges.
“It’s disheartening that as Black individuals, we are all too familiar with the use of the phrase, ‘Stop resisting!’ as a green light for excessive force by law enforcement,” Morrison said.
McLean, following behind his wife, said he stopped to ensure her safety before the trooper turned first to speak with him and quickly drew his gun and ordered him to the ground. The trooper can be heard asking who he was and why he stopped.
McLean said he can’t shake the image of the trooper “charging at my wife, tackling her as I lay handcuffed in the street.” He tried to ask passing traffic to call 911, the lawyers said.
Parker, the mayor, has called the cellphone video that Morrison shot “very concerning.”
“I now know that there was nothing I could have done or said that was going to stop this trooper from violating our rights,” Morrison said Thursday.
Morrison, who is transgender, has held the city post since 2020. McLean, 35, is the chief operating officer of the William Way LGBT Community Center.
veryGood! (8783)
Related
- Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
- What did Michael Penix Jr. do when Washington was down vs. Oregon? Rapped about a comeback
- Poland election could oust conservative party that has led country for 8 years
- More US ships head toward Israel and 2,000 troops are on heightened alert. A look at US assistance
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- Man punched Sikh teen in turban on New York City bus in suspected hate crime, authorities say
- Man punched Sikh teen in turban on New York City bus in suspected hate crime, authorities say
- Fijian prime minister ‘more comfortable dealing with traditional friends’ like Australia than China
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- Georgia deputy fatally shoots 'kind' man who served 16 years for wrongful conviction
Ranking
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Kari Lake’s lawsuit over metro Phoenix’s electronic voting machines has been tossed out
- Kansas isn't ranked in preseason women's college basketball poll. Who else got snubbed?
- Ex-Oregon prison nurse convicted of sexually assaulting women in custody gets 30 years
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- China’s economic growth slows to 4.9% in third quarter, amid muted demand and deflationary pressures
- What Google’s antitrust trial means for the way you search and more
- What are the laws of war, and how do they apply to the Israel-Gaza conflict?
Recommendation
Justice Department, Louisville reach deal after probe prompted by Breonna Taylor killing
DeSantis touts Florida's Israel evacuation that likely would've happened without his help
War between Israel and Hamas raises fears about rising US hostility
A security problem has taken down computer systems for almost all Kansas courts
Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
3 face federal charges in bizarre South Florida kidnapping plot
Remains found in 1996 near Indianapolis identified as 9th presumed victim of long-dead suspect
Doctors abandon excited delirium diagnosis used to justify police custody deaths. It might live on, anyway.