Body camera video shows the violent arrest of a woman outside her daughter’s school in Jacksonville, Florida.

Body camera video shows the violent arrest of a woman outside her daughter’s school in Jacksonville, Florida.

What began as a routine school pickup turned into a violent arrest outside a Jacksonville school, and the incident was captured on body camera video. The arrest, which many are calling excessive, is now the subject of public scrutiny and legal action.

According to police, 39-year-old Erica McGriff left her vehicle running in the middle of an intersection. Body camera footage shows an officer, identified as Officer Holton, approaching McGriff and asking for her driver’s license. When McGriff refused to comply, the situation quickly escalated.

“I need your license,” the officer says in the video. As tensions rise, McGriff continues to refuse, leading to a physical altercation. The footage captures her screaming, “Ow, ow, ow!” as the officer attempts to detain her.

The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office claims McGriff violently resisted arrest, stating that she punched the officer repeatedly and even bit his forearm, causing significant pain.

McGriff is now facing serious charges, including battery on a law enforcement officer and resisting arrest with violence — both felonies, each punishable by up to five years in prison.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump, now representing McGriff, argues that the officer used excessive force. “Regardless of what you think about whether she should have complied, when you look at that excessive use of force — it is not right,” Crump said during a public statement. He is urging the State Attorney’s Office to drop the charges.

“All I was trying to do was get my daughter from school without getting drenched in the rain,” McGriff said in a follow-up interview.

The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office maintains that the officer followed proper procedure. “We follow the rules. We follow the laws,” a department spokesperson stated.

As the legal process unfolds, the case is drawing national attention, once again raising questions about police conduct, use of force, and community trust in law enforcement.

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