Though the modern narrative on police brutality tends to focus on murdered black men and boys, black women and girls are also the victims of over-policing in black communities.
Through hashtags like #SayHerName, organizations like the African American Policy Forum have been shouting from the rooftops for years that black womenâcis and transâare also vulnerable to police violence, including sexual assault.
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Thankfully, data on the rampant rapes of women by law enforcement is finally bubbling up in the news cycle (and really, who do you think is being raped most here? Black womenâs bodies have been stolen since the slave ships.) Itâs high time to finally see that black women and girls also bear the brunt of state abuse.
And so it continues, with the vicious beating of a 14-year-old girl, whom a big grown ass cop can be seen punching twice in her side as she lays prone with her face in the dirt, his knee in her back, gripping and yanking her by the hem of her jean shorts (which is violating in and of itself). According to the Coral Springs police, her treatment was warranted because she âresisted arrest.â
But as anyone with eyes can see, the girl is a victim of excessive force, in a scenario we have seen play out far too many times; just another day in the hood for so many black people, again captured on video.
Of course, the police say she deserved it.
WFLA reports that Coral Springs police have come to the defense of the unidentified officer, saying that the young teen was âunrulyâ and part of a group (you know they wanted to say âgangâ) who were allegedly harassing patrons at a mall.
âUpon meeting with security, an officer was stopped by a mother, who indicated her 5-year old child was shoved to the ground by one of the teens,â Coral Springs police said, according to the outlet. âIn addition, mall security indicated one of the female teens (arrested) was seen striking another teen patron.â
It continues:
The teens were given a no trespass warning, but two of the teens returned to the mall. One of them, a male, was arrested without incident, but police said the girl seen in the video âbegan cursing, attempting to incite the other teens,â and resisted arrest when officers tried to detain her.
One wonders how she was trying to âincite the other teensâ?
In an attempt to copsplain their actions, in a statement, Coral Springs police claim the teen âviolently kickedâ the officer after she was placed in handcuffs:
âDue to her stature and aggressive behavior, officers took her to the ground attempting to get her to release her fists. As seen in the video she resisted arrest, and in order to have her to comply she was struck in the side to release her clenched fistsâshe was then handcuffed.â
âThe officerâs actions were 100 percent within policy, legal and were not excessive,â Dept. Chief Brad McKeone told reporters, according to CBS Miami.
The incident was put on Instagram by a person identifying herself as the girlâs cousin, Victoria Cedeno.
WFLA reports that Cedeno said her cousin was leaving the mall after a boy spit in her face when she was then confronted by cops and âthrown to the grown and punched because she couldnât get her hands free from under her when they [were] trying to handcuff her.â
Cedeno said the officer punched her cousin because she âback talked him.â
This whole narrative of a âmouthy black girlâ deserving whatever is meted out to her was broken down by writer Kirsten West Savali in a 2015 post about a black teen girl thrown down like a ragdoll in school, of all places:
…we witnessed it with Dajerria [Becton]. We witnessed it with Sandra Bland. We witnessed it with Ersula Ore. And weâre witnessing it now. Even when there is no evidence that this girl was in any way disrupting class, the very suggestion that she could have been a âmouthyâ black girl has been enough for some people to ignore their responsibility to her, and others to ask, âWell, did she deserve it?â
The 14-year-old Florida teen was arrested and charged with battery on an officer, trespassing and resisting arrest, and taken to the Broward Countyâs Juvenile Assessment Center.
The girlâs lawyer, Meeghan Moldof, told NBC Miami, âImmediately watching the video, I could not believe what I was seeing. To me, itâs very clear itâs excessive force. Thereâs no reason for him to hit her.â
Moldof said the girlâs mother, Jessica Dennis is considering filing a lawsuit against the police department. Dennis says the video of her daughter being hit was âdifficult to watch.â
 #SayHerName.
Updated, Tuesday, Oct. 23, 2018, 11:35 a.m. EST: This post has been updated to note that the incident in question happened with the Coral Springs, Fla., Police Department, not Coral Gables.
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