A white teenager who recorded last week’s Texas pool party incident, says his “heart dropped” when a police officer pulled out his gun, threatening his black friends. Civil rights activists are demanding the cop featured in the video should be fired.
Fallout continues since the McKinney, Texas pool incident video went viral around the world. The video shows local police rounding up teenagers at the gathering. They violently pushed a black bikini-clad girl to the ground and drawing a gun on other black teens on June 5.
READ MORE: Outrage as Texas cops break up teen pool party, violently force black girl to the ground
Brandon Brooks, 15, who recorded the film, spoke to news
reporters on Monday that he believed racism might have played a
role in trying to explain the police's actions.
“I do feel that is true. I was only one of the white people
in the area when when that was happening, and you can tell when
he asks people to sit down, he kinda skips over me, and tells all
of my African-American friends to go sit down,” Brooks
told NewsFix, KDAF-TV, Dallas, TX.
“I thought that was very uncalled for,” Brooks added,
recalling the incident when a 15 year-old girl was abused by a
police officer who subsequently pushed her onto the ground.
“All she was doing was talking to her friends about the
situation. She was quote unquote ‘running her mouth’ but she has
freedom of speech, and that was very uncalled for, to throw her
to the ground.”
Brooks said it was just kids having a pool party on the last day
of school, having fun, while the police officer behaved in a way
that was “very scary.”
“When he pulled his gun, my heart dropped as soon as he
pulled out his gun as I thought he was going to shoot that
kid,” Brooks recalls. "That was very scary."
Parents, activists, and local pastors held a news conference
outside the McKinney Police Department headquarters calling for
the police officer to be fired.
“It is our hope and prayer that the Chief of Police and the
mayor of this city handle this situation by not only firing this
officer but taking his license, because this was simply based on
race,” Rev. Ronald Wright told reporters.
McKinney city spokeswoman Anna Clark
told the Associated Press the police officer, identified as
David Eric Casebolt, 41, is on administrative leave.
“Several concerns about the conduct of one of the officers on
the scene has been raised,” McKinney Police Chief Greg
Conley said at press conference on Sunday. “The McKinney
Police Department is committed to treating all persons fairly
under the law. We’re committed to preserving the peace and safety
of our community for all of our citizens.”
Officer Casebolt joined the McKinney police force in August 2005,
according to a record from the Texas Commission on Law
Enforcement, AP reports. He earlier served almost two years as a
Texas state trooper.
The ACLU of Texas is asking police to release the entire incident
report and a 911 call related to a pool party. A statement the
group sent Monday
says the incident “appears to be a textbook case of
overuse of force.”
“In too many cities, there are two kinds of policing and we
saw both in this incident: one serving and protecting the white
community and one criminalizing and controlling communities of
color.”