Ohio Police Officer Recorded Brutally Beating a Black Motorist Is Finally Fired

After years of violations, a police officer in Euclid, Ohio, has been fired after he was filmed beating a black motorist during a traffic stop in August. Suggested Reading Have You Heard of The Tragic Story of Phyllis Hyman, a Beautiful, Soulful Singer Derailed By Her Own Demons? Waiting To Exhale’s 30 Years Later: Where…

After years of violations, a police officer in Euclid, Ohio, has been fired after he was filmed beating a black motorist during a traffic stop in August.

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The New York Times reports that Police Officer Michael Amiott was dropped from the Euclid Police Department on Friday.

In a statement released Tuesday, Euclid Mayor Kirsten H. Gail said that Amiott had been suspended for โ€œrules violationsโ€ following the beating of Richard Hubbard, a 25-year-old welder. But the department continued to receive complaints about the officerโ€”thus the firing.

โ€œAfter a review, I found Amiott to have violated additional departmental rules, including conduct unbecoming and courtesy, calling into serious question his suitability as a Euclid police officer,โ€ Mayor Gail said.

Considering the vicious beating Hubbard suffered, as well as revelations of previous misconduct, itโ€™s remarkable that Amiott wasnโ€™t dismissed sooner.

The Facebook video that captures Amiottโ€™s violent confrontation with Hubbard is four minutes long and shows Amiott repeatedly punching Hubbard in the face, head and body. At several points, he also slams Hubbardโ€™s head into the pavement.

Following the arrest, Hubbard was charged with resisting arrest and driving with a suspended license. His lawyer is filing a motion to have those charges dropped.

Amiott had received four letters of reprimand and one formal citizen complaint during his three-year tenure at the Euclid Police Department. But apart from written citations, Amiott was never disciplined.

The citations listed are appalling. Amiott was reprimanded for pistol-whipping a driver with a handgun, mishandling evidence and losing his temper in front of his commanding officer. He was also involved in not one, but two squad-car crashes.

But donโ€™t get too excited about having one less โ€œbad appleโ€ in Ohio. According to James L. Hardiman, the president of the Cleveland chapter of the NAACP, the police union has signaled that it will contest Amiottโ€™s firing.

Read more at the New York Times.

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