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Cops Under Investigation After Body Cam Footage Catches Officer Seemingly Laughing About Woman Killed By Cruiser

  Seattle police union rank-and-file leaders are under investigation after an officer was heard on his   body camera footage   laughing and ...

 Seattle police union rank-and-file leaders are under investigation after an officer was heard on his body camera footage laughing and joking about a woman fatally struck by a separate patrol cruiser earlier this year. The officer who was recorded has stated that he was mocking the callousness of those who would litigate “a tragedy.”

Officer Daniel Auderer, vice president of the Seattle Police Officers Guild, was responding to an officer-involved collision on January 23, where officer Kevin Dave struck and killed Jaahnavi Kandula while driving over 70mph in a 25mph speed zone to a report of an overdose.

Kandula was walking across the intersection, and the impact from the vehicle reportedly threw her over 100 feet. The 23-year-old woman from India died later that night at Harborview Medical Center.

The Seattle Police Department (SPD) publicized the footage on Monday in the wake of a fatal collision after learning of the conversation between Auderer and Officer Mike Solan, who is the Seattle police union’s president. According to the SPD, authorities identified the footage after a department employee voiced concern about “the nature of statements heard” on the video.

In the video, Auderer is only heard in the conversation with Solan.

“I mean, he was going 50 (MPH). That’s not out of control. That’s not reckless for a trained driver,” Auderer said, adding that he doesn’t believe “she was thrown 40 feet either.”

“But she is dead,” he said. He later laughs and says, “No, it’s a regular person.”

“Yeah, just write a check,” he said and laughed again.

 

“Eleven thousand dollars. She was 26 anyway,” Auderer said, misidentifying Kandula’s age. “She had limited value.”

The King County Medical Examiner later determined Kandula’s cause of death was due to multiple blunt force injuries.

According to conservative talk radio 770 KTTH, Auderer reported that Solan “lamented” Kandula’s death in their initial conversation, saying it was unfortunate it would “turn into lawyers arguing ‘the value of human life.'”

“I responded with something like: ‘She’s 26 years old. What value is there? Who cares?’ I intended the comment as a mockery of lawyers,” Auderer said, according to KTTH. “I laughed at the ridiculousness of how these incidents are litigated and the ridiculousness of how I watched these incidents play out as two parties bargain over a tragedy.”

Auderer acknowledged, according to KTTH, that anyone listening to the body-camera recording “would rightfully believe I was being insensitive to the loss of human life,” adding that the comment “was not made with malice or a hard heart.”

Ashok Mandula, Kandula’s uncle in Texas, told The Seattle Times: “The family has nothing to say.”

“Except I wonder if these men’s daughters or granddaughters have value,” he said. “A life is a life.”

After realizing his body camera captured the conversation, Auderer self-reported his comments to the Office of Police Accountability (OPA) watchdog agency, according to KTTH.

The agency confirmed to The Seattle Times that an investigation was underway after SPD attorney Rebecca Boatright emailed the OPA on August 2.

The Seattle Community Police Commission (CPC) issued a statement Monday following the video’s release, calling the conversation between Auderer and Solan “heartbreaking and shockingly insensitive.”

“The video was appalling, and it was heartbreaking and incredibly insensitive,” Joel Merkel, Co-Chair of CPC, said. “Just hearing someone who works at SPD say that about a human life moments after she was killed by being struck by a Seattle police vehicle is absolutely heartbreaking.”

“Today was the first time anyone at CPC saw this video,” the statement continued. “The CPC is really focused on helping ensure that the community can trust its police department. The community deserves a police department that shares its values and that it can trust. Incidents like this are things that break trust. It’s a really big setback, and it really speaks to some of the issues with culture and elements at SPD and also resistance to some of the accountability measures.”

Kandula was set to graduate with a master’s degree in information systems from the Seattle campus of Northeastern University, according to The Seattle Times. Her family told the outlet that she was working toward supporting her mother in India.

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