Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2001 Source: Winston-Salem Journal (NC) Copyright: 2001 Piedmont Publishing Co. Inc. Contact: http://www.journalnow.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/504 Author: Victoria Cherrie Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) SBI IS INVESTIGATING ARREST BY FORSYTH SHERIFF'S DEPUTIES Officers Off Beat During Probe Two Forsyth County sheriff's deputies who witnesses say used excessive force during the arrest of a man have been reassigned until the State Bureau of Investigation completes an investigation of the incident. Deputies S.D. Wells and G.L. Simpson will work in the sheriff's office radio room instead of on the department's Highway Interdiction Team until further notice, said Undersheriff Robert Joyce. The decision came after sheriff's officials met Monday with members of the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, who said they were concerned that officers used excessive force in the arrest of Nakia Miguel Glenn, 20. Glenn, of 619 Mount Vernon Ave., was stopped about 3 a.m Aug. 19 at Cleveland Avenue and 21st Street by the deputies who said he was driving erratically. Witnesses say that the traffic stop was unwarranted and that the deputies beat Glenn in the head with their flashlights. Glenn suffered a head wound, which required staples, according to friends and relatives. He also swallowed or choked on a small bag of cocaine during the incident. A press release issued earlier this week by Forsyth Medical Center and signed by Deana Mitchell, Glenn's mother, says that Glenn is no longer on life support and that his vital signs are stable. No other information is being released. The arrest has drawn a firestorm of criticism from the black community and people who know Glenn, and the NAACP has started its own investigation into the arrest, said Bill Tatum, the president of the local chapter. The organization asked that the deputies be removed from their regular duties until the investigation is finished. Members also want more information about the sheriff's office's arrest policies and the weapons that deputies are allowed to use. SBI agents are expected to arrive in Winston-Salem next Tuesday, Joyce said. No excessive-force complaints against the sheriff's office have warranted being sent to the SBI in the past 10 years, said Joyce. The complaints usually are reviewed by Sheriff Ron Barker or by the department's internal-affairs division, and there is no policy requiring that a deputy under investigation be assigned different duties. But after hearing the NAACP's concerns and reviewing the case, the department temporarily reassigned Wells and Simpson, Joyce said. "It was discussed and we decided this was a good idea," he said. Simpson has been with the sheriff's office since 1995. Wells, who has been with the department since 1997, was accused of using excessive force during the arrest of a man in January, and was cleared by Barker of any wrongdoing. Neither deputy has been disciplined while working for the department, according to the Forsyth County human-resources office. The SBI was called to investigate Glenn's arrest after sheriff's officials reviewed videotapes of the arrest. The sheriff's office has refused to release tapes that were recorded by cameras in the two sheriff's patrol cars that initially responded to the incident, saying that the tapes are part of the investigation. One deputy was driving a Camaro, and the other was in a Crown Victoria with a drug-sniffing dog in the back seat. Both deputies, who are white, are part of the department's Highway Interdiction Team. Deputies in the unit spend most of their time patrolling Interstate 40 and U.S. 52, and have received special training in spotting safety violations on tractor-trailers. During a meeting Monday of the Forsyth County commissioners, Joyce told the board he didn't know why the deputies were on 21st Street. According to the sheriff's office, the deputies stopped Glenn and asked for permission to search his car after smelling alcohol on his breath and watching the passenger making motions around the seat. Glenn initially agreed to the search but then began resisting commands, according to the sheriff's office. When deputies attempted to detain Glenn, the passenger got out of the car and left the area. He has not been identified. Witnesses said that Glenn cooperated with the deputies, but they began to "rough him up" when Glenn asked why he was being handcuffed, a witness said. The deputies sprayed Glenn with pepper spray, but Glenn, who was partially handcuffed, continued to resist, according to the sheriff's office. The police dog was released and charged Glenn. Glenn bit the dog in the face and a deputy on the hand during the scuffle, the sheriff's office said. Glenn got away from the deputies and ran to the passenger seat of the car, according to the sheriff's office. But witnesses said that Glenn was trying to crawl away from the deputies, who hit him several times in the head with their flashlights. Witnesses also said that the deputies kept wiping blood from Glenn's mouth to keep it from making a pool on the sidewalk. A witness said that while he was next to the car he heard a deputy say that Glenn was trying to get his gun. But witnesses said that at the time Glenn had both hands behind his back and deputies were holding him down. At the request of the Winston-Salem Journal the Forsyth County attorney's office released two tapes of radio communications between sheriff's deputies, paramedics and dispatchers for each department. On one tape, a deputy yells, "get down ... get down." Moments later the deputy calls for backup. There is a long pause in the tape while dispatchers send additional sheriff's deputies and Winston-Salem police officers to the scene. A deputy then calls a "signal 25," in police code, a call for immediate assistance. The deputy then says "get me some backup, please get me some backup," according to the tape. An ambulance arrived and was initially dispatched to Forsyth Medical Center without sirens. But shortly after the ambulance crew signed off, paramedics issued a "10-18" call, which means that the ambulance will use lights and sirens. According to the tape, a firefighter and a sheriff's deputy were riding in the ambulance with the paramedics and Glenn. Glenn had a seizure in the ambulance and was resuscitated several times. The bag of cocaine was found by emergency-room doctors who tried to clear his airway, according to the sheriff's office. Tatum said he has not seen the patrol-car videotapes but that there are some questions about whether the incident was completely captured by the cameras, which are supposed to begin recording when a patrol car's blue lights are turned on. A button on the deputies' duty belt turns on the sound for the videotape. "It is a very volatile situation," Tatum said. "People are just rallying with prayer, hoping this young man's condition improves." - --- MAP posted-by: Josh