A Baltimore woman has filed a lawsuit against the city’s police department, mayor and City Council for an incident from March in which she claims officers Tasered her for filming the arrest of a man on a street.
Kianga Mwamba, 36, claimed she was Tasered by police as she filmed a group of officers arresting and beating a man. Footage of the video, which Mwamba captured with her mobile phone on March 30 around 3:15 a.m., surfaced online this week. According to the lawsuit that she filed on Tuesday in a Baltimore court, police erased the two-minute video from her phone. But a storage app on her device allowed her to recover the footage.
RELATED: Baltimore cop suspended after video shows him punching man
Mwamba was reportedly stopped in traffic when she began filming the arrest of the man, later identified as Cordell Bruce. “You telling me I can’t record on my phone?” Mwamba says in the video, as police tell her to continue driving. After she says she will park her vehicle, one of the officers says, “Out of the car.”
“He burning me. He burning me,” the woman says.
At the end of the video, an officer accuses her of trying to run over his colleague with her car. “You a dumb bitch, you know that?” he says.
Police arrested Mwamba on charges of assault for allegedly trying to run over two officers. But prosecutors dropped the charges in September. She is seeking $14 million in her lawsuit against the multiple officers she says were involved in her arrest. She was “brutally attacked” by police, “dragged from her vehicle,” “slammed to the street,” and “was called a ‘dumb bitch,’” according to a copy of the document obtained by msnbc.
J. Shawn Alcarese, one of the three attorneys representing Mwamba, told msnbc he is currently unaware of the identities for each officer involved in her arrest. The attorneys, he added, expect to deliver the details of the lawsuit to the city next week.
After her arrest, Mwamba was placed in a holding cell, where, according to the lawsuit, police mocked and laughed at her for requesting her inhaler, which was still in her vehicle.
The Baltimore Police Department released a statement earlier this week, in which Acting Capt. J. Eric Kowalczyk said the officers’ language during the arrest is “both offensive and unacceptable.”









