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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Nelson Oliveira

Sandra Bland recorded controversial 2015 arrest from cell phone

Nearly four years after Sandra Bland was found dead in a Texas jail cell, a newly released cellphone video offers a new perspective into the controversial arrest and has led her family to call for a new investigation.

The footage shows former officer Brian Encinia knew she was holding a cellphone _ not a weapon _ and recording him during part of the confrontation, in which he threatened her with a Tazer and yelled, "I'll light you up."

For years, the only footage that was believed to exist was from a cruiser's dash cam. The new 39-second cellphone video, which was in the hands of state prosecutors all these years, was obtained by ABC-affiliate WFAA and the Investigative Network.

When journalists from the investigative team showed the video to Bland's family, they said they were not aware it even existed.

"Open up the case, period," Bland's sister Shante Needham told Brian Collister, of the Investigative Network.

Needham said the footage is more evidence that Encinia lied about the circumstances surrounding the arrest. The officer was charged with perjury after an investigation showed he falsely claimed in the police report that Bland had assaulted him. The charge was later dropped as part of a deal in which he agreed to give up his law enforcement license.

Bland, a 28-year-old black woman from the Chicago area, was on her way to a grocery store on July 10, 2015 when she was pulled over for failing to signal for a lane change. She was found hanged three days later at a jail near Houston. Her death was ruled a suicide, though her family insists she would never have killed herself.

The dash cam video sparked nationwide outrage as it showed Encinia threatening to drag Bland out of her car because she refused to put out her cigarette. Encinia would later write in the police report that he feared for his life.

In 2016, Bland's family settled a lawsuit against the jail and the Texas Department of Public Safety for nearly $2 million.

The attorney who represented the family in that lawsuit, Cannon Lambert, was also shown the new video for the first time. He was shocked the video was never shared with the family.

"I've never seen that," he told Collister, in disbelief. "How is this possible?"

"That video shows he's not in fear of his safety and she's not reaching for anything," the attorney said. "It's already in her hand and she's recording him... What did she do to put him in jeopardy? What did she do to make him feel like his safety was in jeopardy?"

Bland's sister said the new video is "crucial" to the case and should lead to a new investigation and Encinia's arrest.

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