Black Restaurant Owner Sues NYPD Following Bogus Arrest, False Police Report
Black Restaurant Owner Sues NYPD Following Bogus Arrest, False Police Report
A black restaurant owner from New York is filing a civil rights lawsuit against the city’s police department, alleging that he was arrested for trying to help a customer in distress.Proprietor Clyde Pemberton told the New York Times that officers didn’t listen to his side of the story. Employees offering to vouch for their boss were turned aside, with law enforcement opting instead to interview three women.Pemberton says he and several employees confronted ‘two women’ who appeared to be moving a third, intoxicated women from the restaurant. When Pemberton and his employees approached, the women—all of whom were white—allegedly began yelling racial slurs at him.The assault purportedly began when Pemberton offered the inebriated woman a chair.In response, Pemberton, a 68-year old retired psychiatrist, was insulted and punched the chest. Another woman struck employee Christian Baptiste in the head with her purse.As the unexpected melee continued, other employees called police to report the disruptive customers.When police arrived at the scene, they didn’t seem interested in hearing both sides to the story. Pemberton says one officer lied in an official report, writing that the establishment staff said they were trying to ‘prevent’ the women from leaving.
All charges against Pemberton and his employees were dismissed last November. Image via Flickr/user:Blogtrepreneur/. (CCA-BY-2.0).
Sources
Black restaurant owner files civil rights suit after being arrested for helping an ailing customerA Black Restaurant Owner Says He Tried Assisting a White Patron in Distress. Police Arrested Him.Black restaurant owner says he was arrested for trying to help white patron
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.