A federal jury found that sheriff’s deputies wrongly detained a Black family at a Northern California Starbucks and ordered compensation of $8.25 million.
Aasylei Loggervale and her two daughters pulled into a Starbucks in Castro Valley, about 25 miles southeast of downtown San Francisco, in September 2019 when Alameda County Sheriff’s deputies handcuffed them in connection to a string of auto thefts, according to their federal lawsuit.
Jurors earlier this month found in the plaintiffs’ favor and set damages at $2.75 million for each of the three.
“This is vindication and validation for the Loggervales, that they’ve been wronged and that means a lot,” their attorney Craig Peters told NBC News on Thursday.
The deputies, who are white, allegedly told them they were being investigated for “car burglaries committed by unidentified Black men in” recent months, the plaintiffs said.
Loggervale refused to show her driver’s license as she and her daughters, 19 and 17 at the time of the incident, firmly but calmly “stated that they had not done anything wrong and had no connection whatsoever to any auto burglaries,” their civil complaint said.
All three were handcuffed as deputies searched their car, purses and cell phones before they were released with no citations or criminal charges.
A federal jury in the Northern District of California found that deputies and Alameda County violated constitutional rights of Aasylei Loggervale and her daughters, Aaottae Loggervale and Aasylei Hardge-Loggervale and breached state civil protections against police harassment.
“The community’s trust in my agency is foundational to my mission of maintaining a positive relationship with those we serve,” Alameda County Sheriff Yesenia Sanchez said in a statement to NBC News on Thursday.
“The facts of this case are extremely important to me and our community members, however, I must reserve my comments until the case has been fully adjudicated through the court system.”
The county has…
Read the full article here