![]() Alisha Oyler, a Speedway employee at 38th and Chicago who witnessed Floyd's arrest and testified that she recorded several brief video clips of Floyd's arrest and turned them over soon after to police. "I don't know, you can call me a snitch if you want to but we have the cameras up for 320's call, and … I don't know if they had to use force or not, but they got something out of the back of the squad, and all of them sat on this man, so I don't know if they needed you or not, but they haven't said anything to me yet," the dispatcher is heard by the jury saying in her call to the sergeant.Ģ. "It was a gut instinct, now we can be concerned." Scurry said she called a supervisory sergeant and reported what she saw. It was an extended period of time," she said. It was then that "something was not right. Multiple times she looked away and then back to see the same image of the officers keeping Floyd on the pavement. She said she glanced up at the screens and saw a police squad moving "back and forth" as officers dealt with Floyd, then moments later take him to the pavement. Jena Scurry detailed how she was troubled by seeing on wall-mounted dispatch screens how Floyd's arrest played out on city surveillance cameras. ![]() Jena Scurry, the 911 dispatcher who handled the call that resulted in Chauvin and the other officers responding to the intersection where Floyd was detained.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |