Shocking video shows LA officers slamming woman to the ground

Shocking moment LA cops slam woman to the ground and pepper spray her for filming them during an arrest when responding to a grocery store robbery

  • Police bodycam captured the incident at a WinCo store in Lancaster, about 73 miles north of Los Angeles
  • A man and a woman were being apprehended outside the store over accusations of shoplifting
  • Cops then approached a woman who was filming the arrest on her phone and threatened to punch her in the face after pepper spraying her

Shocking footage has emerged of a woman being thrown to the ground and pepper sprayed by Los Angeles County sheriff’s deputies outside of a grocery store.

The incident took place on June 24 outside of a WinCo store in Lancaster, about 73 miles north of Los Angeles. 

A man and a woman, whose names and ages have not been released, were being apprehended outside the store over accusations of shoplifting.

The woman, who was thrown to the floor and threatened by officers, was attempting to record the arrest on her phone.

‘Why am I under arrest … for what?’ the suspect can be heard saying before the officer responds he’s ‘not under arrest’ and claims he is just being detained.

Shocking body camera footage released by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department shows a woman being thrown to the ground and pepper sprayed outside of a grocery store 

The man appears to grow annoyed and responds by asking why he’s being detained and is told to ‘calm down’ by a different deputy.

The responding officers can be seen handcuffing him before walking to the woman on her phone recording the ordeal.

As the officers try to grab her arm, she pushes them away and yells: ‘No, you can’t touch me!’ 

The deputies then tell her to stop as one grabs her and throws her to the ground.

‘Get down on the ground!’ the deputy yells.

The woman responds by informing them that her recording is ‘already on YouTube live!’ 

‘Stop it or I’ll punch you in the face,’ the deputy says. ‘You punch me, you’re going to get sued,’ she slaps back.

The incident took place on June 24 outside of a WinCo store in Lancaster, about 73 miles north of Los Angeles, with this woman recording the footage being attacked after she didn’t comply with being detained

The deputies then tell her to stop resisting as one of them manhandles her and throws her to the ground as she asks them to stop

The woman responds by informing them that her recording is ‘already on YouTube live!’ ‘Stop it or I’ll punch you in the face,’ the deputy says

The deputy then pepper sprays the woman as the confrontation continues, while the woman also claims that she ‘can’t breathe’ and that the deputy was putting his knee on her neck. 

Cell phone video showed someone saying that the woman has cancer and asked them not to ‘slam her down like that.’ 

The sheriff’s department said in a statement that the deputies involved have been reassigned and are waiting further administrative review. 

‘While the Department does not make statements related to ongoing investigations, Sheriff [Robert] Luna has made it clear that he expects Department personnel to treat all members of the public with dignity and respect, and that personnel who do not uphold our training standards will be held accountable.

The deputies have already hired an attorney, Tom Yu, who says that the narrative that this is a case of police brutality is false. 

Sheriff Robert Luna issued a statement saying a full investigation is underway and the deputies have been reassigned

The deputies have already hired an attorney, Tom Yu, who says that the narrative that this is a case of police brutality is false

‘There’s a narrative of saying, ‘The deputies struck her down because she was recording,” Yu told ABC7. ‘She’s not an innocent bystander. She’s involved. She’s detained in this robbery investigation.’

Yu claims that if she had done what she was told, force would not have been used.

There will be a protest held calling for accountability for the deputies involved on Wednesday outside that same store, according to KTLA. 

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