WREG.com

Two students seen tasered in Tuscaloosa are from Collierville

TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — Internal affairs investigators with the Tuscaloosa Police Department are looking into videos that surfaced Sunday which show a student being pulled from his apartment by police officers who used a Taser on the man and striking him with a baton.

In the videos, which were recorded early Sunday morning, an officer can be seen standing at the door of a student’s apartment, just off campus, at first arguing with several people.

The officer, who was responding to a noise complaint according to the Tuscaloosa Police Department, was denied entry to the apartment, and a student who was asked to leave the residence can be heard on video refusing to do so.

“I respect your authority, but you’re not allowed in my apartment,” the student says.

“You’re not respecting my authority,” the officer says. “Can you please step out of the apartment and we will talk to you?”

“Absolutely not.”

As other people can be heard yelling about legal representation and warrants, the police officer can be seen grabbing the student — who those in the video refer to as “Brandon” — by the shirt. Tuscaloosa police confirmed that 21-year-old Brandon James Williford was arrested Sunday at the apartment complex and charged with obstructing governmental operations, harassment and resisting arrest.

Williford grew up in Collierville, and his family lives there in Halle Plantation.

“You’re under arrest for harassment for touching my arm,” the officer says.

The officer then shoves another student away before coming all the way into the apartment, followed by several other officers.

In multiple videos that surfaced on social media Sunday, officers can be seen using a Taser on Williford and one appears to strike him with a nightstick several times.

A man and a woman — Matthew Gimlin Macia and Caroline Elizabeth Giddis — were also arrested in the incident. Both 22-year-olds were charged with obstructing governmental operations; Macia was also charged resisting arrest; Giddis was also charged with harassment.

She is also from Collierville, and attended St. Georges.

Hher father and step mother told WREG, she’s a smart girl who worked hard in school.

They said she has an attorney.

The videos were shared thousands of times Sunday, and by that night, the City of Tuscaloosa announced in a tweet that the incident is being investigated.

The Tuscaloosa Police Department confirmed the investigation in a Facebook post soon after.

Peter Pajor, a photographer who graduated from the University of Alabama in May and was among those who shared the videos on Sunday, said in an email that tension between police in Tuscaloosa and students isn’t new. He noted that the school’s student association held a panel in 2014 to advise students of their rights when confronted by police — in particular after going to a bar, and during traffic stops.

“The general vibe is that often the Tuscaloosa police don’t have a whole lot going on so they unfairly focus on students doing minor things wrong,” said Pajor, who added that an officer responding to a noise complaint once “walked right in to my apartment without knocking or asking permission.”

Police have not released the names of the officers who entered the apartment Sunday.

A spokesperson for the Tuscaloosa Police Department on Monday declined requests for arrest reports and more details surrounding the incident, citing the internal affairs investigation. An update on the investigation is expected to be released Monday or Tuesday, the spokesperson said.

The University of Alabama said in a statement Monday that three campus police officers were among those who responded to the scene after a Tuscaloosa police officer requested emergency assistance.

“We are aware of the incident and we remain very concerned about the welfare of all students who were there, especially those who were arrested,” the university said in its statement. “We have reached out to provide support to them, and will continue to provide services they need.”

The University of Alabama is also conducting its own investigation into the campus police who were at the scene, “to verify they acted appropriately.”

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