Crime & Safety

Former Hartford Cop Convicted of Assault [VIDEO]

The retired sergeant pleaded no contest, which is entered into court records as guilty.

HARTFORD, CT — A retired Hartford police sergeant charged with kicking a handcuffed suspect in June 2016 pleaded no contest to a charge of third-degree assault in Hartford Superior Court Thursday.

Sean Spell, 46, received a one-year suspended sentence, two years' probation and 25 hours of community service by Superior Court Judge Omar Williams.

Spell was charged in connection with a June 4, 2016 police pursuit of a stolen vehicle containing two suspects, which began in Hartford and concluded on Flatbush Avenue in West Hartford, where the suspects, Ricardo Perez and Emilio Diaz, were taken into custody.

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During the pursuit, a Hartford police detective was struck and injured by the car operated by Perez, a 2015 Toyota Camry, while several Hartford cruisers were also struck, according to an affidavit supporting Spell's arrest.

In the nine-page affidavit, Sgt. Brian Narkewicz of the Connecticut State Police Western District Major Crime Squad wrote that both suspects had "violently resisted arrest," necessitating the use of physical force by officers, "including the use of a Taser, a baton, and combative techniques, which involve the use of hands and feet."

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Review of video footage from a West Hartford police cruiser's dashboard camera was described thoroughly in the affidavit.

About two minutes after Diaz was placed in handcuffs and lain on his stomach on the grass, he raises his head and upper torso, but is pushed back down flat by Hartford police officer Carlos Torres. Seconds later, Spell, wearing plain clothes, appears to check Diaz's handcuffs, then, with his hands in his pockets, repositions himself to the right side of Diaz.

At about the 3:09 mark, "Diaz's head rises slightly and Sergeant Spell raises his left leg in a bent-knee fashion and delivers a single downward blow with his foot (the portion of his foot making contact is not distinguishable in the video) to the upper back or head of Diaz. The contact appears to cause Diaz's head to move downward and contact the ground," Narkewicz wrote.

After a 20-year career, Spell retired from the Hartford Police Department on Aug. 19, 2016. Several weeks later, he was interviewed by investigators, and said he told Diaz to stop spitting several times. He said he did not have any latex gloves, so he used his foot to put Diaz back down "to prevent him from recklessly spitting the blood around and snap him back into reality."

Video analysis by Narkewicz indicates it was "difficult to definitively determine whether or not Diaz was spitting while bleeding from the head in this kneeling position. However, in the moments preceding the kick by Spell, the officers around Diaz and Spell do not appear to be recoiling or behave as though they are concerned about being spat upon. The post-kick actions of Spell, Torres, Bojka, and Colon also do not suggest concern regarding possible aggression on Diaz's part or concern with contamination from bodily fluids."

Narkewicz concluded the affidavit by requesting Spell be arrested, stating, "there is probable cause to believe that Sean Spell...did intentionally kick Emilio Diaz in the head, while Diaz was handcuffed and kneeling on the ground."

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Video: WNPR News via YouTube

Photo: still frame from YouTube video

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