Baltimore Sun

Lawyer: Prior calls took ‘emotional toll’ on officer

Texas pool party came after 2 suicide incidents

- By David Warren

DALLAS — A Texas police officer had answered back-to-back suicide calls and was fraught with emotion when he responded to a report of a fight at a pool party where he wrestled a black teenage girl to the ground, his lawyer said Wednesday, hours after activists called for prosecutor­s to charge him.

Attorney Jane Bishkin said David Eric Casebolt, known to friends and family as Eric, apologizes for his treatment of the girl and to others offended by his actions Friday at a community pool in the Dallas suburb of McKinney.

“With all that happened that day, he allowed his emotions to get the better of him,” Bishkin said.

Casebolt’s first call that day was to an apartment complex where a man had fatally shot himself in front of his wife and children, she said. The former officer of the year, who resigned Tuesday, then went to a home where a teenager was threatenin­g to kill herself by jumping from the roof of her parents’ home.

“Eric’s compassion during these two incidents is a testament to his character,” Bishkin said, acknowledg­ing that they had taken an “emotional toll” and made him reluctant to respond to the pool party. Ultimately, he did after hearing an assault had occurred, she said.

Cellphone video taken by people at the pool show Casebolt running after black teens and ordering them to the ground, then forcing the teen girl onto her stomach and placing his knees on her back. At one point, he drew his firearm after two young black men charged forward in apparent protest of the girl’s treatment but holstered the weapon when two other officers intervened.

Police say officers were responding to reports of teens unauthoriz­ed to use the pool who were jumping a fence to gain entry. Residents of the middle-class neighborho­od have said teens attending an end-ofschool party at the pool and adjacent park were acting unruly.

Local and national civil rights groups held a protest Wednesday in front of the McKinney Police Department, asking that prosecutor­s charge the 41-year-old white ex-corporal for his actions. Police Chief Greg Conley has called his actions “indefensib­le.”

“We will keep on assembling and protesting until this officer is charged,” said Dominique Alexander with the Next Generation Action Network, based in the Dallas suburb of Grand Prairie.

Grand juries too often have sided with police accounts of violent encounters with minorities, said Pamela Meanes, president of the National Bar Associatio­n, the nation’s oldest associatio­n of predominan­tly black lawyers and judges. That pattern has changed with the proliferat­ion of cellphones, she told media.

“I wonder what the narrative would be if there was no tape from this particular scene,” she said.

Bishkin said Casebolt was “not targeting minorities,” adding, “he also detained a white female, who you do not see on the video.”

The protesters did not specify what charge should be filed against Casebolt, but Heath Harris, who’s representi­ng the one person charged in the fracas, said Casebolt could be accused of a misdemeano­r count of official oppression.

McKinney police have said charges, including evading arrest, against Harris’ client, 18-year-old Adrian Martin, will be dropped.

Meanwhile, Bishkin said death threats against Casebolt have forced him and his family to leave their home for an undisclose­d location.

Daniel Malenfant, president of the McKinney Fraternal Order of Police, said Casebolt hopes his resignatio­n will “restore peace in the community.”

“He was a dedicated and decorated officer, who in this instance was placed in a high-stress environmen­t that he was not completely prepared for,” Malenfant said.

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ/AP ?? Daniel Malenfant, president of the McKinney Fraternal Order of Police, said the officer was dedicated.
TONY GUTIERREZ/AP Daniel Malenfant, president of the McKinney Fraternal Order of Police, said the officer was dedicated.

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