settlement
Settlement - Photo courtesy of Premreuthai on Shutterstock

For the second time in nearly two years, attorneys for a Black teenage girl who was allegedly body-slammed and called an “animal” by a sheriff’s deputy working as a school resource officer at Lancaster High School have announced a tentative settlement in her lawsuit.

The plaintiff, born in 2004, is identified only as Jane Doe 1 in the Los Angeles Superior Court lawsuit that also named as defendants the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, Deputy Daniel Acquilano and the Antelope Valley Union High School District.

On Monday, her attorneys filed court papers with Judge Jerrold Abeles notifying him of a “conditional” settlement in the case with the expectation a request for dismissal will be filed by March 16.

No terms were divulged.

The plaintiff’s attorneys had filed similar court papers in May 2024 stating that the case was tentatively settled at that time. However, Doe’s lawyers stated in later court papers that the defendants had failed to finalize the settlement, citing delays due to an extended internal approval process through the county.

In their court papers, attorneys for the county stated that Acquilano “used force against Jane Doe 1 when she refused to give him her cell phone and walked away from him at Lancaster High School.”

But in a sworn declaration, the plaintiff said she asked the deputy to cite her at the Lancaster sheriff’s station and then take her home rather than to juvenile hall.

“In response, (Deputy) Acquilano said to me, `You’re an animal … and you belong there,”’ the plaintiff said. “He was referring to me belonging at juvenile hall. I believe he referred to me as an `animal’ and sent me, the victim, to juvenile hall because I am Black. I believe he would not call a white person an `animal’ and would not have sent a white teenager to juvenile hall who behaved in the same innocent manner as me.”

Although another deputy opposed taking the plaintiff to juvenile hall, Acquilano instructed a colleague to drive for two hours to Barry J. Nidorf Juvenile Hall in Sylmar, where she was “booked and put in a jail cell until my mom came to pick me up later in the evening,” the plaintiff said.

In earlier court papers, attorneys for the county and the district denied any liability and stated that the plaintiff was not entitled to damages in the suit brought in May 2022.

The alleged body slam was recorded on video and occurred Aug. 30, 2021, when the plaintiff was 16 years old. Doe’s mother was forced to look for alternative education for her daughter through independent study because the district has not removed Acquilano from Lancaster High, the suit stated.

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