Chief “Deeply Troubled” By Video Of Handcuffed Kids
Aurora Police Chief Vanessa Wilson explains circumstances surrounding controversial traffic stop during which several young Black children were held at gunpoint and handcuffed. KUSA's Katie Eastman reports.
AURORA, Colo. (KUSA/NBC News) — Aurora, Colorado’s police chief says she is “deeply troubled” by a weekend traffic stop after reviewing video of the incident.
Throughout Aurora, electronic license plate readers help officers spot stolen cars, but on Sunday morning officers received an alert for a blue SUV that wasn’t stolen.
The car stopped on Sunday just happened to have the same license plate number as a stolen motorcycle with Montana plates.
“The license plate readers that are in the intersections, they just read the numbers, they don’t recognize a state,” said Aurora Police Chief Vanessa Wilson. “They don’t recognize whether a license plate is a dealer plate, or a Montana plate or a motorcycle plate. It just reads the numbers.”
Chief Wilson said her officers should have confirmed that the car they were stopping was actually stolen, and that was the first mistake.
The family that was stopped in the car said the mix-up in plates wasn’t the issue, it was how officers handled it.
In a video that has now been seen around the country, officers are seen standing over four Black kids ages 6 to 17 as they lie on their stomachs, and two of them are handcuffed.
The witness who took the video said officers approached the kids in the car with guns drawn, and Aurora Police confirmed that at least one officer was pointing their gun.
One of the kids forced to lie on the ground was 14-year-old Teriana Thomas.
“When I see stuff like that, especially when I see stuff on the news about police brutality and now that I’ve went through it, it’s like they don’t care,” said Thomas. “Who am I going to call when my life is in danger?”
Read more here.