Man Was 'Cooked on Asphalt' and Got 3rd Degree Burns When Phoenix Cops Pinned Him During Arrest: Attorney
Attorneys for Michael Kenyon announced plans to sue the city of Phoenix for more than $15 million
A man plans to sue the Phoenix Police Department for over $15 million, claiming he was restrained on hot pavement for more than four minutes, causing burns across his body that left him hospitalized for over a month.
Attorneys for Michael Kenyon, 30, filed a notice of claim against the city last week, according to local ABC 15 and The Arizona Republic, saying he plans to file a lawsuit in federal court if the city doesn’t soon settle the case for $15.53 million.
“Michael is 30 years old. At an average life expectancy, he should live another 42 years. That is 15,330 days,” Kenyon’s attorneys wrote in the claim, according to ABC 15. “We are confident that not a single one of you would choose to live in Michael’s disfigured body and traumatized mind for $1,000 a day — and we are confident a jury would agree that this is a modest sum for what the Phoenix Police Department has caused to him.”
CBS News previously reported that Kenyon was walking through a parking lot and talking on his cell phone when police stopped and questioned him last July. Soon after they began questioning Kenyon, four officers pinned him on the asphalt as he pleaded that he could not move and was in pain.
Police have not released body cam footage from the incident, despite media requests, but an onlooker’s cellphone footage showed the incident take place, according to ABC 15.
“Please… please… I can’t move. I didn’t do anything,” Kenyon calls out to the officers in the video as they’re forcing him to the ground, according to the outlet.
Kenyon has not been charged with a crime related to the incident.
ABC 15 reports that Kenyon was taken to a local hospital where he spent more than a month recovering from third-degree burns across his face, arms, chest and legs. The outlet reports that chunks of his flesh are missing from above his knees.
“Phoenix police are demonstrating an utter disregard for human life over and over again,” Bobby DiCello, one of Kenyon’s attorneys, told ABC 15. “This young man was burned to the third degree because his skin was cooked on asphalt.”
Kenyon’s attorneys said the temperature in Phoenix that day was 114 degrees, estimating the asphalt was somewhere between 180 and 200 degrees, CBS previously reported.
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Kenyon’s claim in court last week says that six months after the incident, he is “still undergoing physical therapy and undergoing additional surgeries to attempt to restore simple use of his body,” according to the Arizona Republic.
“He is permanently disfigured as a result of your officers’ actions,” Kenyon’s attorneys wrote in the claim, according to the newspaper.
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