The city of Austin is once again grappling with questions about its police force following a recorded clash on 6th Street that circulated widely on social media this past weekend, as reported by CBS Austin. Amid calls for transparency, additional details have emerged from an arrest affidavit, highlighting a previously unrecorded attack on an Austin Police officer before the widely viewed arrest of 19-year-old Johnny Acuña-Jacobo, as KXAN reports.
The video in question shows APD officers and a crowd in a confrontation, with officers using force against individuals, including the moment one officer struck Acuña-Jacobo multiple times, yet it remains unclear what precipitated the violence and what verbal exchanges occurred as Austin-area defense attorney Ty Cardenas Wittenstein noted the necessity for context to evaluate the reasonableness of the police actions, suggesting that the surrounding circumstances and potential provocations must be fully understood. In contrast, Austin NAACP President Nelson Linder decried the tactics used by the officers as never authorized, asserting that the city’s police force could excel beyond such measures.
However, the affidavit provides a different narrative wherein Acuña-Jacobo allegedly struck an officer in the back of the head, provoking a response from the officer who performed what is termed a “controlled takedown maneuver” followed by “controlled, closed fists strikes” in attempt to subdue and arrest Acuña-Jacobo, who was charged with assaulting a peace officer—a second-degree felony with bail set at $10,000. Maria Delgado, identified as Acuña-Jacobo’s mother, expressed her anguish and concern for her son’s well-being in a statement obtained by KXAN, denouncing the officers’ actions and emphasizing the visible injuries he sustained…