In this Sunday video frame grab from a police body camera, an officer speaks with a 15-year-old girl in Hagerstown, Maryland. An officer pepper-sprayed the 15-year-old girl in a police cruiser when she refused to put her feet inside. (Hagerstown police via AP)

In this Sunday video frame grab from a police body camera, an officer speaks with a 15-year-old girl in Hagerstown, Maryland. An officer pepper-sprayed the 15-year-old girl in a police cruiser when she refused to put her feet inside. (Hagerstown police via AP)

Police video shows officer pepper spraying Maryland girl, 15

Associated Press

HAGERSTOWN, Md. — Police in Maryland released body-camera video late Wednesday that shows an officer pepper-spraying a 15-year-old girl inside a police cruiser until she complies with orders to move her feet so that they can close the door.

Hagerstown Police Capt. Paul Kifer has said the white officer who arrested the girl had to subdue her with the chemical spray so that they could take her to the police station after she tried to leave the scene where her bicycle collided with a car on Sunday.

The video shows that officers repeatedly tried to question her and get contact information for her parents, in part to authorize her refusal to receive medical treatment from the paramedics who responded to the accident.

While the girl shows no visible injuries in the videos and tells the officers she wasn’t hurt, Kifer said police wanted to make sure of that.

One of the officers told a concerned bystander, “All we want to do is make sure she’s OK.”

The family’s attorney, Robin Ficker, said the girl has a white mother and black father. Kifer declined to identify them or their daughter, citing privacy concerns.

On the nearly 15 minutes of police body camera recordings, the dark-skinned girl can be seen and heard becoming hysterical as she’s being detained. Finally, two officers cuff the girl’s hands behind her back and hold her down by her shoulders as they tell her to stop resisting.

“Get off of me, stop touching me!” she screams, and an officer responds, “I’m not going to stop touching you, because you wanted to leave.”

“We’re trying to help you,” one officer says, explaining that they need to contact her parents, since she’s a minor. She refuses to give them more information, saying she will get in trouble.

Finally, two officers pick her up by the shoulders and legs. She kicks one of their body cameras, stopping the recording, the department explained. A second officer’s recording then shows her continuing to resist as they put her in the cruiser.

“Put your feet in, you’re going to get sprayed,” an officer says. Another tells other officers, “I’ll just spray her if you want to step back.” He then reaches over the open door and sprays her several times. The door closes as the girl coughs and screams, “I can’t breathe.”

The officer reports to a dispatcher that a “female got pepper sprayed” and the cruiser drives off to the station in Hagerstown, a city of 40,000 about 70 miles west of Baltimore.

Kifer said investigators determined the girl was to blame for the collision. In the video, the car’s driver tells an officer that she rode through a red light and points out several scratches on his car door.

She was charged as a juvenile with assault and disorderly conduct, as well as failure to obey a traffic device and marijuana possession.

Ficker, retained by the mother, posted a bystander’s cell phone video of the arrest on social media Tuesday before the police video was released.

“This little girl, 5 ft. 105 lbs, was brutalized by Hagerstown police after, she, on her bike, was hit by a car, but refused medical treatment. They slammed her against a wall, arrested her for refusing treatment, maced her 4 times in the police car while handcuffed, and took her to the police station instead of the hospital!” Ficker posted on Facebook.

Ficker told The Associated Press that her father did take her to a hospital after picking her up at the station. Ficker said she was treated and released with sprained muscles and soreness everywhere, including her wrists from being handcuffed.

He said she’s been unable to participate in high school soccer and wrestling practice.

“I think the soreness is not caused by the car so much as it was caused by the police,” he said.

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