By Matt Agorist
Police officers beat people on video, a lot. And, more often than not, the officers will keep their jobs in spite of video evidence of the attack. However, an attack on a teenager by an Atlanta cop was so egregious that it did, in fact, cost him his job. And now, it is costing him his freedom. Officer Matthew Johns was indicted on eight felonies for the savage beating of a 15-year-old boy last year; and this week, he was sentenced to 20 years.
As TFTP reported in October, Johns was indicted on eight felonies, including four counts of aggravated assault, two counts of violation of oath by an officer and two counts of giving false statement for repeatedly kicking and choking a 15-year-old boy until he was unconscious and then lying about it. Johns pleaded guilty on July 10, and was sentenced on Monday to 20 years with five to serve in prison in connection with the 2016 incident.
Former Atlanta Police Officer Matthew Johns was sentenced this evening to 20 years to serve 5. pic.twitter.com/FfTgkvP4PX
— Fulton County DA (@FultonCountyDA) August 26, 2019
Disturbing dashcam footage of the beating of the Atlanta teenager showed the brutal actions of former Atlanta police officer Johns. The video shows Johns repeatedly stomp, kick, and punch the teen, Antraveious Payne, who was not at all resisting arrest.
Johns was not supposed to be there that day because he was on a ‘no drive list’ for irresponsibly crashing his cruiser a few weeks prior. However, he was still allowed to check one out, use it to ram another car, and then savagely beat a teen and lie about the entire ordeal.
As WSB-TV reported at the time:
It all unfolded on Sept. 15, 2016, in southwest Atlanta. Former officer Matthew Johns, who was a part of the department’s elite Apex Unit, arrived at the scene after the pursuit led by Zone 3 officers and Georgia State Patrol.
Johns, who we’ve learned is also a Marine, is seen jumping out of a cruiser and immediately runs up to one of the three teenage suspects in the stolen car and kicks him in the head.
The video also shows he kicked the teen more than once, struck him on his side repeatedly and then was seen kneeling on his neck before punching him in the head while cuffing him.
Johns told investigators he thought the teen was reaching for a gun. But one of his supervisors didn’t think his story added up, especially when the other officers on scene said the three suspects never resisted.
Prosecutors, using the video of the incident, agreed, noting that Payne got out of the car and laid on the ground with his hands up, showing he did not have a weapon and was willing to surrender.
Nevertheless, Johns still beat the hell out of him until the teen fell unconscious. Payne was beaten so badly by Johns that he was hospitalized with a concussion and suffered multiple lacerations to his face.
According to the report, after the incident, Johns was placed on administrative leave and no action was taken until a new police chief took office and reopened the case.
Johns was then fired. However, for beating a compliant suspect for no reason, he faced no criminal charges—until more than a year later.
Payne was in a stolen a car. He deserved due process and to be to be held accountable for his actions. However, because of Johns’ inability to resist violently lashing out, this teen’s alleged car theft will now end up costing the taxpayers of Atlanta in the likely lawsuit that will follow.
Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard noted that this is what is supposed to happen to cops who betray their oaths and act like Johns.
“There were no demonstrations or marches by concerned citizens, no chants or any destruction of property,” Howard previously said about the case. “It was not necessary because the criminal justice system did exactly what concerned citizens demand of it; fairness, transparency and action.”
Sadly, especially in Atlanta, this is a very rare case and most cops are not sent to prison.
As the Free Thought Project previously reported, Georgia has a problem with cops like Johns.
Almost half of the people killed by police in Georgia since 2010 were unarmed or shot in the back according to a new investigation. More than one-third of those killed were shot at their own home after officers responded to a call for help or a domestic dispute.
A recent investigation from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution analyzed 184 fatal police shootings in the state of Georgia since 2010. According to the data, at least 70 people were shot in the back by police officers. Roughly one in six people were unarmed, while one in four exhibited signs of mental illness before their deaths. At least 11 people were both unarmed and shot in the back when police officers killed them.
The report also found at least 20 cops involved in fatal shootings had serious prior issues filed against them. Four had been previously fired or resigned, two were disciplined for lying, and two others had failed to complete state-mandated annual use-of-force training to keep their arresting powers when they killed suspects.
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