Paris police suspended over beating of Black man

French
Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin ordered several Paris police officers
suspended after the publication of videos showing them beating up a Black man
and using tear gas against him with no apparent reason.
The
incident came as President Emmanuel Macron’s government is pushing a new bill
that restricts the ability to film police, which has prompted protests from
civil liberties groups and journalists concerned that it would allow police
brutality to go undiscovered and unpunished.
Videos
published on Thursday by French news website Loopsider show the violent arrest
of a music producer identified only by his first name, Michel, in the 17th
arrondissement or district of the French capital on Saturday.
Three
officers followed Michel inside his music studio after they apparently saw him
walking in the street without wearing a mask, Loopsider reports. The published
video images, both from a security camera inside the studio and filmed by
neighbors outside, show officers repeatedly punching him and beating him with a
truncheon.
The
officers then left, called in reinforcements and threw a tear gas grenade into
the studio to get those inside to come out, according to Loopsider. It reported
that nine others who were recording music in the studio basement were also
beaten. Michel told Loopsider that the officers hurled repeated racist insults
at him, and he was taken in custody for 48 hours.
Darmanin
tweeted that the body that investigates allegations of police misconduct, the
Inspectorate General of the National Police, known by its French acronym IGPN,
is looking into the case, saying, “I want disciplinary proceedings to be led as
soon as possible.”
The Paris
police prefecture said in a statement that IGPN will seek to establish the
exact circumstances surrounding the man’s arrest.
The Paris
prosecutor’s office is also investigating the police actions. The prosecutor’s
office said Thursday it has dropped the proceedings against Michel opened the
day of his arrest, and instead opened an investigation for “acts of violence by
a person in position of public authority” and “false declaration.”
It’s the
second such police brutality investigation in Paris this week prompted by video
footage. The government ordered an internal police investigation on Tuesday
after police officers were filmed tossing migrants out of tents and
intentionally tripping one while evacuating a protest camp.
That same
day, France’s lower house of parliament approved a draft law meant to
strengthen local police and provide greater protection to all officers. It notably
makes it a crime to publish images of officers with intent to cause them harm.
The bill, which enjoys public support after recent terrorist attacks, will now
go to the Senate.