NYC ordered to pay $2.5M to George Floyd protestor in excessive force lawsuit
Share this @internewscast.com

A federal jury has decided to award $2.56 million to a protestor who claims she sustained brain damage after NYPD officers allegedly forced her head onto the pavement during a Black Lives Matter protest in Brooklyn in 2020. The demonstration was in response to George Floyd’s death.

Before the incident on June 3, 2020, Brigid Pierce, aged 37 at the time, was a marketing director, the author of eight unpublished novels — including a unique “second-person lesbian zombie romance” — and was planning her wedding to her girlfriend, according to her attorney.

The dramatic turn of events occurred when police allegedly knocked her down at a protest outside the Barclays Center amid widespread demonstrations triggered by George Floyd’s murder by police in Minneapolis. As a result, Pierce sustained lasting brain damage that now impairs her vision, concentration, and causes migraines and numbness. Her lawyer also notes that she faces a heightened risk of early-onset dementia.

“The Brigid who once penned novels, completed marathons, and dazzled in aerial circus acts is no longer,” her lawyer, Ilann Maazel of Emery Celli Brinckerhoff Abady Ward & Maazel, shared with the jury during closing arguments at the Brooklyn Federal Court. “Now, Brigid exhibits low energy, confusion, and memory loss.”

After a two-week trial, the jury concluded on Thursday that the city was responsible for the assault and battery against Pierce.

“I feel immense relief with this victory. Challenging the NYPD in New York City is not commonplace, and it feels akin to a David vs. Goliath battle,” Pierce expressed to the Daily News on Sunday. “I’ve been grappling with this brain injury and its repercussions for over five years, so this verdict has been a long-awaited resolution.”

The jury found one officer, Joseph Ryder, who Pierce says started the violent encounter when he knocked her down after she started filming police, liable for neglecting to get her medical treatment. But the jury did not find Ryder himself used excessive force, failed to intervene in the excessive force of other officers, assaulted Pierce, falsely arrested her or violated her First Amendment rights.

They did determine that one or more “John Doe” officers assaulted her. Footage shown at the trial shows several officers, not named in the lawsuit, holding her to the ground and forcing her head to the pavement.

“While we believe the verdict was incorrect we are pleased the jury recognized the plaintiff was not falsely arrested and her First Amendment rights were not violated,” said Nick Paolucci, a city Law Department spokesman. “We are evaluating next steps.”

Ryder, now a detective specialist assigned to the NYPD’s press office, testified that Pierce grabbed his shield “and that’s when I decided to affect the arrest.” He said Pierce kicked her after he brought her down and she was “actively resisting” arrest.

After she was zip-tied, Ryder tried to talk with her as he led her away. “I was trying to tell her that what happened to George Floyd was unequivocally murder and that I was very happy (Derek Chauvin) was arrested,” he said.

The NYPD declined to comment on the verdict.

Police body camera footage shows Brigid Pierce being arrested at a protest on June 3, 2020.

Court evidence

Police body camera footage shows Brigid Pierce being arrested at a protest on June 3, 2020. (Court evidence)

Maazel argued at trial  that Ryder, at 6-foot-2, towered over the 5-foot-5 135-pound Pierce. Another officer pushed a protestor to Pierce’s right with his riot shield so Pierce, her phone out, yelled, “I’m watching you, I’m f—ing livestreaming” — and that’s when Ryder grabbed her and threw her to the ground without warning, and without an order to disperse, according to her civil lawsuit.

A group of officers pinned her to the ground after that and one of them — she never learned who — “ground her head into the concrete,” Maazel told jurors at the trial’s start. The officers ziptied her hands and corralled her into a city bus with other protestors, keeping her there for hours despite a bleeding head wound and her requests for medical attention, Maazel said.

“I thought that this was a very horrifying moment that I was going through,” Pierce told The News. “I had no idea as it was happening that this was going to change the rest of my life.”

Her injuries cost her her career, she said. She lost her job as a director of marketing for a music and arts organization because she couldn’t focus on task management or look at a screen for an extended period of time. Her marriage fell apart. She wound up moving to France and studying to become a luthier, repairing violins for a living.

Brigid Pierce was arrested at a protest in Brooklyn on June 3, 2020.

Courtesy of Ilann Maazel

Brigid Pierce was arrested at a protest in Brooklyn on June 3, 2020. (Courtesy of Ilann Maazel)

“The tragic irony of this case is that Brigid was protesting police violence and at the very protest, and at that very protest she as brutalized by the police,” Maazel told The News. “For doing nothing more than protesting, the NYPD changed her entire life.”

The jury awared her $553,000 for pain and suffering, $946,000 for past and future loss of income and $763,000 for life care costs.

 

floyd protest

Black Lives Matter demonstrators march on Atlantic Ave. in Brooklyn on June 4, 2020.

Gardiner Anderson for New York Daily News

Black Lives Matter demonstrators march on Atlantic Ave. in Brooklyn on June 4, 2020. (Gardiner Anderson for New York Daily News)

The city’s lawyers argued at trial that Pierce was exaggerating her condition, with attorney Jonathan Hutchinson telling the jury that she initially didn’t complain of any serious head injury.

“All this information changes after she decides to sue and she starts to craft her narrative,” he said. “You watched her testify for three days. Ask yourselves, did you see a person crippled by anxiety or cognitive decline? No. You saw a person who is sharp, articulate, total command of the facts, correcting me on my French pronunciation, deservedly.”

Hutchinson also portrayed her career change as her lifelong dream.

“Nobody is forced to become a luthier,” he told the jury. “The fact that plaintiff is claiming that she had to leave her job to move to France because of these officers — France, where her fiancé lived, where the best lutherie school in the world is located — shows you just how much they are willing to bend the truth.”

Pierce said she wasn’t particularly fazed by that argument, noting that she was going back to vocational school in her 30s and 40s. “For them to pretend that that was something that I did for pleasure is just so ridiculous to me that it didn’t even feel hurtful to be accused of that,” she said.

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like
Florida Senate president to undergo tests for 'potential abnormality' after hospitalization

Florida Senate President to Undergo Diagnostic Testing Following Hospitalization for ‘Potential Abnormality

On Sunday, President Ben Albritton was taken to the hospital due to…
Anti-ICE agitators arrested outside Minnesota hotel as police declare unlawful assembly: 'No longer peaceful'

Unlawful Assembly: Anti-ICE Protesters Detained in Minnesota Hotel Standoff

Authorities in Minnesota took action on Monday, arresting protesters who had gathered…
'Mob mentality' endangers officers amid anti-ICE unrest and chaos in Minneapolis, retired cops warn

Retired Officers Warn of ‘Mob Mentality’ Threatening Law Enforcement During Anti-ICE Protests in Minneapolis

Experienced figures from law enforcement circles are sounding the alarm over a…
Palmdale Street shooting on Jacksonville's Northwest side leaves man dead

Breaking: Shocking Shotgun Incident Leaves Man Hospitalized in Jacksonville Beach

In the early hours of Monday, a man was left in critical…
FBI says woman threatened to murder agent and his family after stealing ID from car during Minneapolis riot

Minneapolis Riot Theft Turns Deadly: Woman Threatens FBI Agent and Family After ID Heist

In Spokane, Washington, federal authorities have apprehended a woman accused of threatening…
VCU anti-ICE nurse references paralytic drug in video instructing healthcare providers to 'sabotage' agents

VCU Nurse’s Controversial Video Sparks Debate: Calls to ‘Sabotage’ ICE Agents Using Paralytic Drugs

Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Health, in collaboration with the VCU Police Department,…
Columbia University anti-Israel group slams new president as 'fascist' over previous encampment bust-up

Columbia University Protesters Condemn New President as ‘Fascist’ Amid Controversy Over Past Encampment Crackdown

Columbia University’s freshly appointed president is already encountering backlash from critics opposing…
Self-described Minn. Antifa member calls for 'armed' men to stop immigration agents he calls 'mass murderers'

Outrage in Minnesota: Antifa Member’s Controversial Call to Arms Against Immigration Agents

An individual identifying as an “Antifa” member in Minneapolis has urged armed…
'Comrade Newsom' Street Art Hits LA, Sacramento As the Lampooning of the CA Gov. Continues Apace

Bold Street Art Targets Governor Newsom in LA and Sacramento: A Satirical Take That’s Turning Heads

California Governor Gavin Newsom has found himself in a challenging period, amid…
Judge orders ICE chief to appear in court to explain why detainees have been denied due process

Judge mandates ICE chief’s court appearance to address due process denial for detainees

In an unusual legal move, a federal judge has mandated the presence…
FBI investigating Minnesota anti-ICE Signal group chats, Patel says

FBI Probes Minnesota Anti-ICE Signal Chats, Patel Reveals: Uncovering the Digital Trail

Federal authorities have begun an inquiry into alleged organized Signal group chats…
Video shows teen thrown off e-bike at skate park; Jacksonville officer arrested

Attorney Defends Off-Duty JSO Officer’s Actions at Skate Park, Labels It a Crucial Public Safety Move

The attorney representing Officer Stephen Hicks has clarified that the child involved…