Officer Shouted Stop Resisting As The Evidence Reviewer Lay Still-Teptep

The officer said, “Stop resisting,” while Marcus Ellison was lying completely still on the pavement outside Riverton City Hall.

His face was turned sideways against the warm concrete, one eye squeezed shut, the other fixed on the kerb where his phone had landed.

His hands were already locked behind his back.

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His legs were still.

His voice was low because the breath had been knocked from him, but every person close enough to hear him understood the words.

“I am not resisting.”

Officer Travis Cole shouted over him anyway.

“Stop resisting.”

The words struck the street harder than the fall had.

People knew what they were seeing, even if they did not yet know what to do with it.

A woman near the steps stopped with an appointment card in her hand.

A man in a damp coat lowered the lid from his takeaway tea and simply stared.

Two people at the kerb looked at one another in the awkward, frightened silence of strangers who suddenly realise they are witnesses.

Across the road, Danielle Ellison screamed her husband’s name until her throat hurt.

Behind her, in the back seat of the family car, thirteen-year-old Amara Ellison held up her phone with both hands.

She was not trying to be brave.

She was a child doing the only thing she had ever been told might help when adults in uniforms refused to listen.

“Please don’t hurt my dad,” she cried through the glass.

Marcus heard her.

That was the part that almost broke him.

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