Several Utah cops are facing disciplinary action after a trainee officer was caught using a utility knife to cut a dead homeless man ā as others watched on and laughed, according to authorities.
Newly released bodycam footage showed the officers using the knife on Jason Lloyd, 47, after he was found dead who in a tent in August, the Salt Lake City Police Department announced Friday.
The video shows a trainee officer on only his 11th shift ā identified by FOX 13 as Dakota Smigel ā being given the knife āto pop multiple blisters on Mr. Lloydās right arm,ā the department said after an investigation.
āI feel like youāre pranking me,ā Smigel was heard telling the others leading him to the body. āWhy are you smirking like that?ā he asked ā telling the others: āYou guys suck.ā
Despite those concerns, Smigel was seen cutting into Lloydās skin, while other officers could be heard laughing in the background, the gruesome footage showed. The trainee was then told by the others to leave details about the knife out of his police report, his department confirmed.
āOur investigation found that some of the conduct in this case was unprofessional, discourteous, disrespectful and offensive,ā said Salt Lake City Police Chief Mike Brown.
Seven employees were placed on administrative leave for the incident ā with all but one already back at work, the department said.
The lone officer to quit, Mark Keep, resigned after being found to have violated eight department policies, according to Fox 13.
Smigel was judged to have āreasonable grounds to believe his actions were allowed and approvedā because he was so new to the job and following instructions of seniors who were training him, the department said.
One of those officers, Paul Mullenax, returned to work after a three-day suspension for violating four department policies, the outlet said. Another, Michelle Peterson, received a warning for violating two department policies.
The violations included standard of conduct violations, death investigation procedure violations, and report preparation violations, police said.
āThis behavior does not align with the professionalism and integrity we demand as a police department,ā Chief Brown said.
āI extend my deepest condolences to Mr. Lloydās family. Every person we encounter deserves to be treated with dignity and respect. Our decorum during death investigations must never again fall short of our core values as it did at times in this case.ā
Lloydās family said the newly released footage and feel like they are āgrieving all over again.ā
āWhen Jason passed away, we werenāt able to have an open casket, we werenāt able to have that closure that you usually get when a loved one passes,ā Lloydās sister, Heather Fisher, told The Salt Lake Tribune.
āAnd now our closure is seeing him on a bodycam video in a tent being treated that way,ā she said.
āWeāre frustrated because this investigation has been going on since August and, as his family, we had no idea. We had no idea he was treated poorly. We had no idea he was disrespectedā¦ We feel like weāre grieving all over again,ā Fisher said.
ā[Lloyd] was homeless, but he was still loved,ā Fisher added tearfully.
Since this incident, SLCPD employees have received additional training on āprofessionalism, decorum, and ethics,ā the police department said.
The Salt Lake County District Attorneyās Office said on Feb. 14 that it would not be pursuing criminal charges for any of the officers, according to cops.