A former long-serving officer in the suburban Detroit police department appeared in federal court this week in connection with multiple charges related to his physical altercation with a Black teenager this summer at the Warren Police Department jail.
The incident was captured by the jail’s surveillance camera, prompting the Department of Justice to allege he not only used “unreasonable and excessive force” but provided false information regarding the incident in his official report.
Matthew Rodriguez, who served 14 years in the department, appeared before a federal judge on Monday, Nov. 6, and was arraigned on civil rights violation charges connected to his actions against Jaquwan Smith as the 19-year-old was being booked on carjacking and weapons charges on June 13.
A federal grand jury indicted the former officer on Thursday, Nov. 2, on two counts: willfully depriving a prisoner of his constitutional rights by using excessive force and lying about it in official paperwork. The Michigan resident faces up to 30 years in prison if found guilty. The federal case has subsumed a state case against Rodriguez, local station WDIV reports.
“The protection of individuals’ Constitutional Rights, even the accused, is one of the highest priorities of the Department of Justice and my office,” U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Michigan Dawn Ison said in a statement after the indictment was revealed.
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