Advertisement

Tampa police officer loses job after dragging woman into jail

Officer Gregory Damon was seen on video dragging the handcuffed woman. He was fired after a review found he violated department policies.
A still image from a video provided by the Tampa Police Department shows Officer Gregory Damon dragging a handcuffed woman toward a jail booking area. Damon was fired after he was found to have violated department policies during the incident.
A still image from a video provided by the Tampa Police Department shows Officer Gregory Damon dragging a handcuffed woman toward a jail booking area. Damon was fired after he was found to have violated department policies during the incident. [ Tampa Police Department ]
Published Dec. 27, 2022|Updated Dec. 28, 2022

TAMPA — The Tampa Police Department fired one of its officers Tuesday after he was recorded dragging a handcuffed woman across the ground toward a Hillsborough County jail booking room.

An investigation found that Officer Gregory Damon violated several department policies during the Nov. 17 incident.

It happened after he and other officers were called early that morning to the Tampa Family Health Centers at 4620 N 22nd St. in the Belmont Heights area. People at the medical office reported that a woman was sleeping outside the building and refusing their requests to leave the property.

The same woman had previously been told to stay away from the property, police said. She was arrested on a trespassing charge.

When Damon arrived with her at the Orient Road Jail, the woman refused to step out of the back of his patrol SUV, police said.

Body-worn camera video that police released Tuesday captured his interaction with the woman.

“I’m going to drag you out of this car,” he told her.

“I want you to drag me,” she said.

Related: Hillsborough sheriff’s deputy resigns after DUI arrest

The video shows the officer taking her by the arm, pulling her out of the vehicle, then moving her across a long concrete floor toward a sign reading “search your arrestee” over the doorway to the central booking room. The woman speaks defiantly, berating the officer throughout.

As he drags her, the officer stops and tells the woman to stand up. She remains on the ground.

Damon continued to drag her toward the doorway. He pressed a call button, summoning two Hillsborough County jail deputies to come outside to help bring the woman into the room.

Tampa police did not name the woman in a news release about the incident, but jail booking records indicate that she is 46 years old. Her listed address is a Tampa facility that provides services to homeless people. She was booked in jail at 10:19 a.m. that day on a trespassing charge. Booking notes indicate that she was released a few days later to a mental health facility. The criminal case against her continues to be prosecuted.

Supervisors at the jail, which is run by the Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office, reported the incident to the Tampa Police Department. An investigation by the Professional Standards Bureau began the next day. Damon was relieved of his duties while the probe was ongoing.

Related: Pinellas school resource officer accused of drunk driving in cruiser is fired

The department’s policy on dealing with uncooperative detainees at the jail states that officers should request assistance from the jail booking staff. Jail deputies can help the officer lift the person into a restraint chair to be wheeled into the jail.

Police said they tweaked their policy after a similar incident in 2013, adding language that it is inappropriate to drag a person who is being uncooperative.

Stay on top of what’s happening in Tampa

Stay on top of what’s happening in Tampa

Subscribe to our free Tampa Times newsletter

You’ll get a roundup of the biggest Tampa community news twice a week.

You’re all signed up!

Want more of our free, weekly newsletters in your inbox? Let’s get started.

Explore all your options

In a news release, police noted that the woman used vulgar and obscene language toward the officer, but that Damon also made rude and derogatory comments toward her. His policy violations included rules addressing courtesy to the public.

Investigators reviewed the officer’s body camera footage and surveillance video from the jail and interviewed Damon, finding no clear justification for the policy violations.

The investigation concluded Tuesday with a decision to fire Damon. He had worked as a patrol officer since 2016.