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Black preacher arrested while watering flowers in Alabama sues police

This image captured from body-cam video shows a police officer putting Michael Jennings in handcuffs
A police officer puts handcuffs on Michael Jennings in Childersburg, Ala., on May 22. Jennings was helping out a friend by watering flowers when officers showed up and arrested him.
(Childersburg Police Department via Associated Press)
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A Black pastor who was arrested by white police officers while watering the flowers of a neighbor who was out of town filed a federal lawsuit alleging the ordeal violated his constitutional rights and caused lingering problems including emotional distress and anxiety.

Michael Jennings filed the lawsuit Friday against three officers and the central Alabama town of Childersburg requesting a jury trial and seeking an unspecified amount of money.

Jennings’ lawyers held a news conference outside the Birmingham federal courthouse Saturday to discuss the lawsuit, and the NAACP, the nation’s oldest civil rights group, and other groups planned a rally afterward at a downtown park.

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“I’m here for accountability, and I’m here for justice,” Jennings told the news conference.

Western officials and analysts say Ukraine has punched through the front lines south of the country’s second-largest city, retaking big swaths of territory.

The suit alleged the actions of Officers Christopher Smith and Justin Gable, Sgt. Jeremy Brooks and the city violated rights protecting against unlawful arrest and guaranteeing free speech. He cited multiple continuing problems including post-traumatic stress disorder and humiliation.

Childersburg City Atty. Reagan Rumsey didn’t return an email seeking comment.

Jennings, 56, was arrested in May after a white neighbor called 911 and said a “younger Black male” and gold SUV were at a house while the owners — who are friends of Jennings and had asked him to watch their home — were away.

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Jennings identified himself as “Pastor Jennings” but refused to provide identification to the officers, who arrested him on a charge of obstructing government operations after a 20-minute confrontation that included raised voices on both sides.

Filed in municipal court, the charge was dismissed within days at the request of the then-police chief. Jennings’ attorneys last month released police body-camera video that was obtained after a records request to the city, located 55 miles southeast of Birmingham.

Benard Simelton, president of the Alabama branch of the National Assn. for the Advancement of Colored People, said the officers who arrested Jennings did “so many things” that weren’t in line with good community policing tactics.

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“These poor judgment decisions reflect poorly on the type of training the Childersburg police officers receive … if they were acting in accordance within police guidelines,” Simelton said in a statement.

Although Jennings could have filed a claim against the city seeking damages, attorney Harry Daniels said that wasn’t done because the arrest was well within the time frame allowed by law for a lawsuit.

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