‘It was not a fair fight’: Police release body camera footage was injured six from Cincinnati Bar controversy – watch video

In the Cincinnati viral beating case, the police have now released new body camera footage from the scene that led to the arrest of six people and also injured six people. The footage apprehended the officials who reached the spot on Saturday, 26 July at around 3.25 pm. According to a report by Fox News Digital, a single 911 call inspired the law enforcement, the New York Post reported. In the video, a man wearing a 62 -year -old polo green shirt told the Sinsinati Police Department official, “I am 62 years old. I was attacked. I was attacked by many people.” When the officer asks, “What did the fight lead to the fight?”, The man responds, “really don’t know,” and says, “It just got out of the bar and it just went crazy.” He further clarified, “Okay, you didn’t meet anyone inside the bar?” To which he responds, “No, no, no. Not at all. I became a side-pan. It was not a proper fight at all.” Another body camera video obtained by Fox News Digital, asks a female officer to witnesses if “argument was about wings.” The footage shows the purchase and disputed wings of a group in a local food truck in the early hours of Saturday, 26 July. A witness said, “I heard that it was a white man who told the man.” Due to this incident, a grand jury led the prosecution of six persons on the same day, the body camera footage was released on the same day. The office of Hamilton County Prosecutor confirmed allegations against Patrick Rosemond at the age of 38 years; German Matthews, 39; Montianz Merriveder, 34; Dakeira Vernon, 24; Dominic cast, 37; And Aisha Devaghan, 25. Each is allegedly facing three cases of hooliganism, three allegations of attack and two allegations. Hamilton County prosecutor Koni Pilich said, “What I saw on the video is not a Cincinnati I know and love. These allegations make the people involved in the attack accountable.” A viewer of cruel beating at the fourth corner was released about two weeks after the video and went viral on the streets of Elm, causing national outrage. Describing the incidents, Sakshi J. Black said, “I saw a little uproar, seen people scorching in a way, so a kind of zoom was made, and once when focused on my phone, I saw that the so -called victims were very aggressive to the group of people who were already standing there.” Black said that the person involved continued the fight using racial slars despite other people’s attempts to intervene. The incident has criticized the clear lack of police presence in the city area, in which only eleven officials deployed there on the night of dispute. At a press conference last week, Sinsinati Police Chief Theresa Thetge expressed disappointment, saying, “This is unacceptable not to call the police. Traffic was frightening. People saw this. They were fighting in front of traffic. Why did people not call us? One of the victims, Holi, was seen in additional footage, which was violently slammed to the ground while trying to separate the fighters. Recalling his experience in Fox News Digital, he said, “I remember that I am afraid, I am nervous. I remember that I shine my life in front of my eyes, and I can think, ‘Dear god, I hope my children know that I love them.” Holi revealed that the attack left him with brain damage and severe fusion, resulting in injuries to life-changing. “I am helping someone take care of me financially, mentally and physically,” he said. Cincinnati Mayor Afteb Purewal addressed the violence during a press conference last week, “It was a terrible incident, and our law is working quickly and effectively to make everyone responsible for enforcement justice.,