Man Claims Racial Profiling for Arrest While Attached to IV

A man says he was racially profiled when he was arrested by police as he walked outside a northern Illinois hospital with an attached IV.

The Journal-Standard reports Freeport police on June 9 arrested Shaquille Dukes, his brother and another man for disorderly conduct because of their conduct toward a security officer and police. Authorities say the security guard called police because he believed Dukes was trying to steal the equipment.

The 24-year-old Dukes says he had been hospitalized with pneumonia for two days when his doctor cleared him to go for a walk outside, as long as he didn't leave FHN Memorial Hospital property.

Dukes says when he and the others were asked to approach the guard's vehicle he did so, taking him off hospital property. He says the IV was removed after he was arrested, causing him to pass out.

Freeport police Lt. Andrew Schroeder says people shouldn't rush to judgment about the case.

The Rockford Register Star reports that Freeport City Manager Lowell Crow has asked a police chief from another community to determine if the officers acted properly.

Crow turned to Mitch Davis, police chief in the Chicago-area suburb of Hazel Crest, after reviewing police body camera footage and interviewing Dukes.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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