By Errin Haines,
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA (AP)—A 23-year-old Smyrna
man says four Cobb County police officers
dragged him from his car and beat,
stomped and kicked him while shouting
obscenities and racial slurs as he tried to
protect himself and figure out what he
did wrong.
Lawyers for Kalu Ugah filed a federal
civil rights lawsuit Thursday against the
department and five of its officers, alleging
an unprovoked attack on Ugah during
a traffic stop while he was returning
home from visiting a friend.
The night of the alleged beating, Feb. 3,
Ugah was arrested and charged with driving
under the influence, reckless driving
and driving without his headlights.
"I just want justice to be served and
for the whole world to see that racism
still exists in this country,” Ugah told
reporters at a news conference. “This is
something I had to do to let the world
know that it's not going anywhere until
we do something about it,” he said.
Cobb County Police Department
spokesman Dana Pierce said the department
had not yet been officially served
notice of the lawsuit, and declined comment.
He also declined to comment
about the alleged beating, but did say that
the incident is under investigation by the
internal affairs department.
When asked to provide a copy of the
incident report, Pierce declined, saying
that document is now part of the internal
affairs investigation.
According to the complaint, Ugah
was returning to his Smyrna apartment
when a Cobb County patrol car pulled in
front of the complex entrance, blocking
him.
Ugah said one of the officers drew
his gun and ordered him out of the car,
but he was unable to exit because he was
blocked by the apartment complex’s
security gate.
He said a second police car pulled
behind him, an officer jumped out and
dragged the 5'11", 190 lb. student from
the passenger’s side of his car onto the
ground, throwing him onto the cement
curb.
"I just kept asking, “Sir, what did I
do?’” Ugah recounted. “I couldn't do
anything. I was just defenseless.”
He said he was beaten on the head,
back, neck and ears, and his face and
right eye bled after the beating, which he
said lasted at least five minutes. Afterwards,
he said, the police informed him
he was driving without headlights and
under the influence.
Ugah said he was offered a breathalyzer
test, but refused.
"After being beaten up, why should I
take it?” he said, adding that he had not
been drinking that night and had never
been arrested before.
Ugah spent several hours at the Cobb
County Adult Detention Center. He said
that afterward, a friend took pictures of
his injuries outside the jail. A mug shot
also shows a bruise to his right cheek.
He then complained to the internal
affairs office, which he said has not
responded.
The following day, he went to a hospital
for treatment of his injuries, which
he said included bleeding in his eye, cuts
and scrapes on his cheeks and bruising
and lacerations on his knees.
Ugah’s attorney, Adam S. Jaffe, said
the handling of the case shows deliberate
indifference by authorities.
"It looks like they’re trying to cover
up some bad behavior,” Jaffe said.
Ugah, who is studying to be a heating
and air conditioning technician at
Chattahoochee Technical College, said he
is healing from his injuries but is still in
pain and haunted by that night.
"I saw my life flashing in my hands,”
he said. “I thought I was about to get
killed.”
Source:AP - AP Wire Service
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