Police
Clifton NJ police officer facing questions after video surfaces of him punching teen
A Clifton, NJ police officer is facing questions after a video of him punching a teenager surfaced on the Internet.
A Clifton police officer is facing questions after a video of him punching a teenager surfaced on the Internet.
The footage shows 15-year-old Alex Cruz going at it with a Clifton police officer in a video that went viral on Youtube.
First he’s pushed to the ground, but he gets up and runs at the officer and appears to slap him across the face and an all out altercation breaks out.
“He pushed me and hit me and the other cop came and choked me,” said Cruz.
In an exclusive interview with ABC Eyewitness News, Cruz says he was just trying to break up a fight between his girlfriend and another girl when the officers showed up.
“He said I hit him before everything happened and I didn’t,” adds Cruz.
Clifton NJ police have seen the video and are investigating but so far standing by the officer’s use of force.
“Whatever force is reasonable in overcoming the force the suspect is using against the officer,” said Det. Robert Bracken.
Clifton NJ police say once he was handcuffed and bought to headquarters, his attitude didn’t get better.
“Upon arrival at headquarters he continued his belligerent aggressive behavior toward officers… He began spitting on the floors of the police department,” adds Cruz.
Even though Alex says he did nothing wrong, he would do something different next time.
“I could have let them do what whatever,” he adds.
No one involved says the Clifton NJ police officer didn’t hit Alex, the question is, was he justified in doing so.
Follow Unheard Voices on Twitter
----------------------------------------------------------
Connect with Unheard Voices on Twitter, Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, YouTube
Download the app on Google Play or ITunes.
----------------------------------------------------------
Unheard Voices Magazine is a news reporting platform covered under Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research.