A Pima County sheriffβs deputy is on administrative leave after he was video-recorded wrestling a 15-year-old quadruple amputee to the ground while arresting him for disorderly conduct at a group home, officials said Friday.
The eight-minute video released this week by the Pima County Public Defenderβs Office shows a portion of an altercation between Deputy Manuel Van Santen and two teen residents at a group home on Sept. 26.
βI was horrified. I cried actually. Iβm in disbelief that anybody would treat a child that way, especially a man with a badge and a gun. It was horrific,β said Public Defender Joel Feinman.
Feinmanβs office represents the limbless teen who is shown in the video, who lives at the group home because he is in the custody of the Arizona Department of Child Safety. His first name is Immanuel. The Arizona Daily Star is not using his last name because he is underage.
βIt was Immanuelβs decision as well, he decided he wanted the video to be released because he wanted the public to know what happened to him and he wants the public to understand what kids like him face often times at the hands of police officers,β Feinman said.
βHe supposedly knocked over a trash can and was yelling and screaming at the employee of the group home,β Feinman said. βThe deputy showed up, found Immanuel still upset, Immanuel was then yelling at the deputy. Immanuel tried to move past the deputy and at that point, thatβs when the deputy tackled him.β
The Pima County Attorneyβs Office dropped the misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge against Immanuel after the video was released Thursday, first to KOLD-TV, and subsequently posted on many local and national media websites.
Van Santen, an 11-year veteran of the Sheriffβs Department, was placed on leave while the incident is investigated.
The video apparently begins in the middle of the incident, with Immanuel screaming at Van Santen to let him go as heβs being pinned down on the kitchen floor by the deputyβs body. The struggle leads to the teen being pushed against a refrigerator.
Van Santen later asks, βWhatβs your problem?β
Later in the video, after Van Santen stops holding Immanuel down and the teen sits up, Van Santen is seen bending over toward him and yelling, βIβm telling you to stop moving and you still moved, so shut the hell up. β¦β
βIβll raise my voice at you whenever I (expletive) want, do you understand?β the deputy says.
When a 16-year-old boy who was video-recording the altercation comments, Van Santen tells him to βshut the hell upβ and to go to his room.
Van Santen later grabs the older teen to detain him, putting his arms behind his back and pushing him into a wall. That teen has by then passed his phone off to another to keep recording.
Chief Criminal Deputy Jonathan Mosher, with the Pima County Attorneyβs Office, said Friday in a written statement:
βYesterday, for the first time, our office saw the video from the September 26th, 2019, incident. The Public Defender obtained this video and released it to news media, but our office was not given any opportunity to review this video until yesterday. Upon reviewing the video, we have dismissed all charges pertaining to this incident.β
The Arizona Department of Child Safety said it is also looking into the incident.
βThe safety of the children in our care is our top priority. We are currently working with law enforcement and the group home to review the incident,β said Darren DaRonco, a spokesman for DCS.
Feinman said teens living in DCS group homes have often been abused or abandoned.
Pima County Sheriff Mark Napier said it is premature to talk about potential discipline of the deputy or possible changes in departmental training.
βI have seen the video. There are things on the video that are concerning,β Napier said in an interview Friday. βWeβve launched an investigation in our department. At conclusion of the investigation, weβll turn over the findings to the County Attorneyβs Office for review.β