Members of the Briggs family were arrested Oct. 3-4, 2019. Less than two weeks earlier, on Sept. 21, the lawsuit says, Brandon Alvin was arrested for loitering in front of his home and assaulted by police as his family watched.
Alvin’s cousin Ed Baldwin, who lives next door, also was arrested while observing what was happening to Alvin.
“They took Mr. Baldwin into custody, because I guess he wasn’t moving fast enough for them. So it’s not just one targeted family, but this is happening to Black people in Chester Township, all over the township, and for this to happen three times in 10 days with the same officer, it’s what leads us to believe that this is pervasive,” Fitzpatrick said.
In 2019, the team of attorneys called on Pennsylvania Attorney General Josh Shapiro to step in.
The lawsuit filed Wednesday in U.S. District Court in Philadelphia, seeks both punitive and compensatory damages and says that Chester Township’s loitering statute is being used to generate municipal revenue and target Black community members.
At the press conference, Fitzpatrick delivered a searing indictment of what he contended is an unconstitutional statute.
“Imagine a local law that allows the police to exercise discriminatory treatment, harass residents, beat them, abuse them, arrest them, and charge them criminally for standing outside of their own homes,” Fitzpatrick said.