Protests

NY Officers Suspended for Shoving Elderly Protester, Causing Him to Fall

Warning: Viewers may find the video to be graphic and disturbing

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Two officers were suspended after being seen on video shoving the man and him falling to the ground. More than 50 officers resigned from the voluntary assignment after the suspension was announced, but remain with the department. NBC New York’s Natalie Pasquarella reports.

What to Know

  • Gov. Andrew Cuomo called for the firing of two Buffalo police officers seen shoving a 75-year-old protester to the ground, causing him to hit his head
  • The victim remains hospitalized in serious but stable condition
  • The two officers were immediately suspended without pay; Cuomo said Friday he encouraged the local DA to investigate the case for potential criminal charges

Two police officers in Buffalo, New York, have been suspended without pay after they were caught on camera shoving a 75-year-old protester, causing him to fall and knock his head to the ground. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said Friday the local district attorney should investigate the case for potential criminal charges.

Barring that, the governor thinks the officers should be fired. Cuomo said he had spoken with the injured protester and said the graphic video of the encounter made him "sick to my stomach."

"It's just fundamentally offensive and frightening," Cuomo said. "Who are we? How did we get to this place."

Cuomo later said in a tweet that the actions of the officers "offends our sense of decency & humanity. It’s frightening."

By Friday afternoon, officers assigned to Buffalo's Emergency Response Team resigned in protest of the officers' suspension, NBC affiliate WGRZ reported.

"Fifty-seven resigned in disgust because of the treatment of two of their members who were simply executing orders," said John Evans, president of the Buffalo Police Benevolent Association.

Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown says plans are in place to maintain police services and ensure public safety. The city's police commissioner, Byron Lockwood, said that all members who resigned from the voluntary assignment are still employed by the department.

The confrontation occurred shortly after the city's 8 p.m. curfew on Thursday, WGRZ reported. Journalists from Spectrum News Buffalo and WBFO were reporting in Niagara Square as they witnessed officers lining up to push back protesters who were out calling for police accountability and racial justice following the death of George Floyd. One of their videos shows the elderly man calmly approaching the officers, appearing to ask them a question, but the officers pushed the man back.

The shove caused the protester, later identified as Martin Gugino, to lose his balance and fall back, hitting his head on the concrete. Gugino appeared to have been knocked unconscious and blood flowed out of one of his ears.

In a statement provided by his attorney Kelly Zarcone, Gugino was said to be in serious but stable condition, and is alert.

"Mr. Gugino has been a longtime peaceful protester, human rights advocate, and over fan of the U.S. Constitution for many years," the statement read. "Mr. Gugino requests privacy for himself and his family as he recovers. He appreciates all the well wishes he has received and requests that any further protests continue to be peaceful."

"I was deeply disturbed by the video as was Buffalo Police Commissioner Byron Lockwood. He directed an immediate investigation into the matter, and the two officers have been suspended without pay," Mayor Brown said.

WGRZ initially reported that the Buffalo Police Department said the man was injured after he tripped and fell. A department spokesperson didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment, NBC News reported.

The Eric County District Attorney's Office says it is investigating the incident that occurred outside City Hall. New York State Attorney General Letitia James said her office supports the investigation, and stands by ready to assist following the incident that appears to "be a horrific display of abuse and lack of concern for New Yorkers."

A former Buffalo police officer told the local NPR affiliate WBFO stories from her time with the department on Friday, which came with multiple instances of police brutality. She said she was fired just months before receiving her pension after she jumped on another officer in an effort to stop him from choking a prisoner.

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