[ad_1]
From: Sara milstead
Published:
The guard thinks the surveillance camera is broken.
Then he pulls out the teeth of the man suspected of stealing razor blades.
The security guard is now charged with aggravated battery.
The man, who is a Romanian citizen, tried to steal razor blades from a grocery store, but did not get very far. Upon leaving, two plainclothes security guards surprised him red-handed. The arrested first resisted, but then relented. They took him to a counting room waiting for the police and placed him in a chair with his arms handcuffed behind his back.
Then one of the guards begins to behave strangely.
He looks at the surveillance camera and goes and looks behind an open door.
Then go back to the suspect.
The man in the chair has no idea. Suddenly, without warning, the guard slaps the man across the face with his elbow.
The beaten man, who is still behind bars, spits out bits of teeth after the blow.
At the same time, the security guard behaves as if he had been fired in writing.
Keep humiliating the man
– You see in the movie that I was calm before everything happened. The detainee is sitting depressed in the chair. You can see in his eyes that he doesn’t see this coming at all, says prosecutor Peter Claesson in the Norrort prosecutor’s office.
But it doesn’t end there. The guards force the man to fall to the ground and continue the humiliation.
When the police later show up, the perpetrators claim they have acted in self-defense.
But everything is contradicted when it turns out that the camera, which the guards thought was out of order, recorded the entire course of events.
– Yes, it is quite clear that the guards lie. Also, one of them had the stomach to claim damages, says Peter Claesson.
Suspected of lying during questioning
One of the guards is now charged with aggravated battery. Both are also accused of false accusation after lying in police questioning.
– It’s extremely tough. They did this in the exercise of authority and as guardians they have special powers. In fact, they have the right to handcuff people, which means a lot of trust. But this goes beyond what is allowed, says Peter Claesson.
– Also, as security guards, they have high credibility in the judiciary. If this hadn’t been captured on surveillance camera, they probably would have gotten away with it, says Peter Claesson.
Published: