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ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - A Rochester police officer has been placed on administrative duty after using pepper spray on a woman suspected of shoplifting who tried to escape with her 3-year-old child in her arms, authorities said Friday.
Video of the Feb. 22 incident has been made public at a time when the Rochester Police Department is under intense scrutiny over its interactions with Black residents, including the death last spring of Daniel Prude.
Body camera video of the latest encounter shows the woman, who is Black, bolting from a white officer who had stopped her in the street and told her she had been accused of stealing from a convenience store.
The officer chased the woman down the sidewalk, then struggled to subdue her while trying not to injure the screaming toddler. Another officer arrived and carried the child several yards away.
A statement from the police said the woman was pepper-sprayed during the arrest.
"The child was not pepper-sprayed or injured during the arrest," the statement said.
Another clip — a recording of a monitor playing surveillance camera footage — shows an officer pepper spraying the woman before another officer helps pull the woman’s daughter away. The two then pin her on the ground.
The woman, whose name was not released, was ultimately charged with trespassing.
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Police Chief Cynthia Herriot-Sullivan told reporters on Friday the officer appeared to follow protocol, but "some things to me aren’t as simple as whether a policy was followed or not."
"Just because we can do certain things, doesn’t mean we should," she said at a news conference. "Can we get to the same place by utilizing a different strategy?"
The city’s Police Accountability Board, an entity created by a 2019 voter referendum to look into allegations of police misconduct, said it saw "troubling parallels" with another emergency call in which officers pepper-sprayed a distraught 9-year-old girl they had handcuffed and placed in the back of a police cruiser during a family dispute.
"Both incidents involved Black mothers. Both involved Black children. Both involved Black people obviously in crisis. Both involved officers using pepper spray on or around a Black child," PAB Chair Shani Wilson said during a video news conference Friday.