Activists claim excessive force used during student's arrest at Willowbrook Mall

Monday, September 21, 2015
Activists: Excessive force used during mall arrest
A 22-year-old says he was approached by an officer for riding his hoverboard through a mall and ended up spending the night in jail for a charge of resisting arrest.

HOUSTON -- The video of college student Jesse Valdez inside Willowbrook Mall being arrested has ricocheted around social media for the past two days.

Now, Valdez and his supporters say the arrest was unjust. They are demanding that the Precinct 4 Constable Deputy seen arresting him on the video to be fired.

"I've been watching the video over and over when I got out of jail; it brings tears to my eyes. I just can't take it," says Valdez, who was surrounded by his family, his pastor and community activist Deric Muhammad.

The group held a news conference in front of Willowbrook Mall Monday afternoon.

Valdez says he was riding a small Segway, a motorized scooter type device, around the mall Saturday night with the Precinct 4 Deputy Constable asked him to get off the device.

"The officer asked me to get off the Segway, and I asked him if this is a rule, or the law that I have to get off the Segway," recalled Valdez. "Instead of politely answering my question, he used force and took me off the Segway."

Valdez says he was pulled off, allegedly thrown against the wall, threatened with a Taser, and then placed under arrest.

The video taken by his brother, Michael Roulhac, only begins after Valdez is already on the ground, being handcuffed. In it, you can hear both brothers repeatedly question the deputy on the arrest. Some profanity is also audible. In addition, you can see on the video a large crowd gathered around the incident.

Precinct 4 is standing behind the arrest of Valdez. It released the following statement Monday afternoon:

Besides the charges against Valdez, the constable's office says charges could be pending against the brother for agitating the situation.

"I was completely unknowing of any charges against me," said Roulhac, who says he first heard about potential charges from the media. "I didn't interfere in anyway, considering when I was recording, my brother was already in handcuffs."

Both brothers have had previous misdemeanor brushes with the law, ranging from trespassing to minor drug offenses. Their supporters say that's unrelated to this case.

"If he (the deputy) knew neither one of them before he approached them, then their history has no bearing whatsoever on what it is we're talking about," Muhammad said.