A former Philadelphia police officer has been charged for his role in beating a mother in West Philadelphia during a protest against police brutality in 2020.
Darren Kardos, who has since been fired from the department, was charged with aggravated assault and related offenses, District Attorney Larry Krasner announced Thursday.
Young, who had just picked up her teenage nephew, was instructed by police to make a U-turn. Before Young could extract herself from the scene, officers swarmed her SUV — bashing its windows in — and pulled Young and her 2-year-old son from the vehicle. Officers beat and maced Young and kept her away from her son for several hours.
Last year, Rickia Young was driving past protests against police violence, when police assaulted and detained her. The city settled for $2 million.
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Kardos is accused of smashing in Young’s SUV windows with his baton and pulling Young out of her vehicle by her hair. The District Attorney’s Office said Kardos also made claims about Young’s actions that “were not corroborated by video evidence.” Kardos could not be reached for comment.
Later that night, the National Fraternal Order of Police posted a Facebook photo of a PPD officer holding Young’s son, saying he was, “lost during the violent riots in Philadelphia, wandering around barefoot in an area that was experiencing complete lawlessness.” The post concluded by saying, “We are the Thin Blue Line. And WE ARE the only thing standing between Order and Anarchy.”
Krasner, referencing the “false, inflammatory” post, said, “that child was ripped away from the child’s mother, who was brutalized.”
The FOP, which took down the post a day later, “all but accused Ms. Young of abandoning her child,” Krasner said. The FOP declined to comment on the charges against Kardos.
About 100 people gathered in Germantown to honor Walter Wallace Jr., and call for Philadelphia to invest in alternatives to traditional policing.
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Hours after the aggravated assault against Young, police released her without filing any charges.
The city reached a $2 million settlement in September with Young over the violent assault. The city told Young’s lawyers that the agreement was the largest pre-trial settlement for a police brutality case of its kind.
Assistant District Attorney Lyandra Retacco, of the Special Investigations Unit, said a combination of police bodycams and cell phone video of the incident prompted the charges announced Thursday.
“The video clearly made out the case against former officer Kardos,” said Retacco.
Krasner would not say whether more officers would face charges.
WHYY’s Alan Yu and Tom MacDonald contributed reporting.
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