Bodycam footage shows two officers berating a five-year-old and handcuffing him


A police department in Maryland has released body camera video that captured two of its officers berating a 5-year-old boy who had walked away from his elementary school, calling him a ‘little beast’ and threatening him with a beating.

The video released Friday by the Montgomery County Police Department shows one of the officers repeatedly screaming at the crying child, with her face inches from his.

‘Oh, my God, I’d beat him so bad,’ the officer said in the child’s presence before telling him, ‘You do not embarrass me like this at school.’ 

The officers found the boy about one block from East Silver Spring Elementary School and drove him back to the school on Jan. 14, 2020, where they were met by a school administrator. The video shows an officer forcing the crying child onto a chair in the principal’s office.

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Officers with the Montgomery County Police Department found the boy about one block from East Silver Spring Elementary School and drove him back to the school on Jan. 14, 2020

Officers with the Montgomery County Police Department found the boy about one block from East Silver Spring Elementary School and drove him back to the school on Jan. 14, 2020

‘Shut that noise up now!’ the other officer shouted near the boy’s face. ‘I hope your momma let me beat you.’

One of the officers pulled out his handcuffs and closed one of loops around the child’s right wrist.

‘When you get older, when you want to make your own decisions, you know what’s going to be your best friend?’ one officer asks the terrified boy. 

‘These right here. You know what these are? These are handcuffs. You know what they’re for? You know what these are for? These are for people that don’t want to listen and don’t know how to act.’ 

Video shows the officers talking with the boy once they find him near the school

Video shows the officers talking with the boy once they find him near the school

They then load him into the patrol car and bring him back to the school, yelling at him on the way

They then load him into the patrol car and bring him back to the school, yelling at him on the way

The officer grabbed onto the little boy tightly as they led the boy back into the school

The officer grabbed onto the little boy tightly as they led the boy back into the school

The boy’s mother has filed a lawsuit over the January 2020 interaction. Lawyers for the child’s mother, Shanta Grant, said the video shows the officers treating her son ‘as if he were a hardened criminal.’ They said Grant is seeking ‘justice and fair compensation for the trauma he endured.’

‘She also hopes that the incident will lead to changes in policy and training, both with the school and the police,’ the attorneys, Matthew Bennett and James Papirmeister, said in a statement.

Grant appears in the footage, at one point undressing her son to show that she doesn’t beat him and that he isn’t ‘being physically abused.’

‘I’m not losing my child to the system and I’m not going to prison,’ she says in the clip. 

'Oh, my God, I'd beat him so bad,' the officer said in the child's presence before telling him, 'You do not embarrass me like this at school'

‘Oh, my God, I’d beat him so bad,’ the officer said in the child’s presence before telling him, ‘You do not embarrass me like this at school’

Officers handcuffed the boy and told him that he would need to get used to them

Officers handcuffed the boy and told him that he would need to get used to them

The video released Friday by the Montgomery County Police Department shows one of the officers repeatedly screaming at the crying child, with her face inches from his

The video released Friday by the Montgomery County Police Department shows one of the officers repeatedly screaming at the crying child, with her face inches from his

‘You don’t go to prison for beating your child,’ one officer tells the mother. 

The Washington Post reports that the police department and the county’s public school system declined to address the incident in detail, citing the mother’s pending lawsuit. But the school system issued a statement describing the video as ‘extremely difficult’ to watch.

‘There is no excuse for adults to ever speak to or threaten a child in this way,’ the school system said. ‘As parents and grandparents, we know that when families send their children to school, they expect that the staff will care for them, keep them safe and use appropriate intervention processes when needed.’

A police department spokeswoman told the newspaper that the two officers in the video remain employed by the department after an internal investigation.

The boy's mother has filed a lawsuit over the January 2020 interaction. Lawyers for the child's mother, Shanta Grant, said the video shows the officers treating her son 'as if he were a hardened criminal'

The boy’s mother has filed a lawsuit over the January 2020 interaction. Lawyers for the child’s mother, Shanta Grant, said the video shows the officers treating her son ‘as if he were a hardened criminal’

‘A thorough investigation was conducted of the entire event,’ the department said in a statement.

The boy’s mother sued Montgomery County, the county’s education board and the two officers. Her complaint names the officers as Dionne Holliday and Kevin Christmon, but the department hasn’t released their names.

Police department spokesman Rick Goodale said he can’t comment beyond the department´s written statement on Friday or say whether the officers were disciplined. ‘All that is confidential personnel records under (Maryland) law,’ he wrote in a text message to The Associated Press on Saturday.

Montgomery County Council member Will Jawando said the video ‘made me sick.’

‘We all saw a little boy be mocked, degraded, put in the seat of a police car, screamed at from the top of an adult police officer´s lungs, inches from his face. This is violence,’ Jawando said.

Montgomery County Council member Will Jawando said the video 'made me sick'

Montgomery County Council member Will Jawando said the video ‘made me sick’

Montgomery County Executive Marc Elrich said in a statement Friday that he directed the county’s police chief to revisit training for how officers are expected to interact with children.

‘Our police officers are not social workers, psychologists, or therapists and should not be giving advice or direction on parenting. Police duties should end as soon as school personnel are present to take over care of a child,’ he said.

Elrich also said he is ‘limited’ in what he can say about the matter while the mother’s lawsuit is pending and can’t discuss ‘disciplinary outcomes which have been taken.’ 

The Montgomery County Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 35 released a statement about the video, sharing that the incident could have been ‘handled better by all involved.’

‘Officers were called to assist the school with a child who ran away from school staff. It is clear, that the event and everything that has come after the event should have been handled better by all involved,’ they said.

‘It’s important to note that unless an officer is assigned to a specialized unit, Montgomery County police officers do not receive training on how to effectively communicate with a young child in distress.’ 

The Montgomery County Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 35 released a statement about the video, sharing that the incident could have been 'handled better by all involved'

The Montgomery County Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 35 released a statement about the video, sharing that the incident could have been ‘handled better by all involved’

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