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German police investigated after pinning youth with knee

Both officers involved are white and the youth, who was pinned, appears to be white as well and was apparently unharmed
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Berlin, August 17

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German police have opened an internal investigation of a weekend incident caught on video in which two Duesseldorf police officers pin a young man to the ground, one holding his arms behind him and the other holding his head with his knee, authorities said Monday.

In the video of the Saturday evening incident, widely shared on Twitter, a bystander can be heard saying “move your knee, brother” and “that’s not funny.”

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Duesseldorf police said in a statement that the officers had been called to a restaurant at about 7:30 pm Saturday in a central part of the city on reports that about 10 people were rioting.

The youth who was pinned was apparently not involved in the fracas but “disrupted police measures” when they arrived on the scene, then assaulted officers when they were trying to identify him, police said.

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After the incident, the youth, whose name and age wasn’t given, was taken to the police station for identification and then handed over to his legal guardians.

“The video in question is being intensively analysed and evaluated with regard to how the police intervened,” Duesseldorf police said in their statement.

The investigation is being conducted by police in nearby Duisburg “for reasons of neutrality”, police said.

Germany has seen many Black Lives Matter protests since George Floyd was killed May 25 in Minneapolis by police officers, with one officer holding his knee against Floyd’s neck for nearly eight minutes.

In the Duesseldorf case, both officers involved are white and the youth who was pinned appears to be white as well and was apparently unharmed.

The North Rhine-Westphalia state Interior Ministry told the DPA news agency that the video was being taken “very seriously” and that if any wrongdoing by the police was found, there would “naturally be consequences”. AP

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