Trey Songz says he just might take legal action against the Springfield, Mass. police department following his arrest last Sunday after a performance.
Police said the R&B singer would not leave the crime scene as instructed during an investigation of gunfire following his concert at Springfield's Hippodrome.
Songz, born Tremaine Neverson, was taken into custody for resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. Kenny Bugg, who was with Songz, was arrested on the same charges while another man in their party, Jasper Murray, has disorderly conduct charges pending.
Anthony Williams, the man who allegedly fired the gun into the crowd outside the Hippodrome, is charged with multiple crimes including assault with intent to murder, assault and battery and assault with a dangerous weapon.
Songz described the incident in detail to MTV.com.
"The show went real well. No incidents [inside]," Songz recalled. "As soon as we finished [performing], they turned the lights on and everyone started to leave.
"My homie goes to get one of the police officers to escort us out of there and [someone in the parking lot] started bussin' [firing a gun]. So we started ducking in the car. So my homie runs back to the car and gets in like, 'They bussin'!' By the time we look up, we see the police [had] apprehended somebody, so we said, 'We ain't finnin' to wait.' We got out the car and proceeded to walk, 'cause the hotel is only a block away. The police stopped us and were like, 'Hold up, hold up.' "
Songz said that the police were not letting anyone out of the parking lot without being searched. The artist said he and his entourage were trying to comply with the officers' request to search them, but things went badly.
"They go to my road manager Bobby and they wanna check him," he said. "Bobby tells them he had like $6,000 in show money — because if they started feeling on that, they might think something. So he tells the cops he's got the money in his pocket and the cops break bad with him. They grabbed the road manger by the neck, and I'm standing right beside him. So my bodyguard steps out and pushes me out the way because that's [his] second nature. They think because he steps up, he wants to stop something."
Songz said that one officer tried and failed to take down his tall, 300-pound bodyguard but did not succeed, so more officers jumped in.
"It was seven on him, beating his a--," Songz said bitterly. "He caught it in the back of the head with a nightstick. His face was swollen. His arm was out of place."
Songz said he too got roughed up after yelling at one of the officers. He said he was angry because he saw a group of white officers laughing about what had just happened, and verbalized his disdain.
"The officers were joking about hitting [us]," Trey fumed. "I was like, 'Man, y'all stomped my n---a's face in.' That's when they tackled me. It was like four officers on me. One officer had his knee in my throat. They was kicking me in the ribs. Talking to people in that community, they say that thing happens all the time."
Jennifer Flagg, chief of staff of the Springfield Police Department, told MTV News that Songz and his friends were arrested because officers found them to be "verbally and physically combative after attempting to cross the police line."
As for Songz's allegations of racism on the part of the police, Flagg said, "I would ask him why the other hundreds of African-Americans [who attended the show] were not harassed either." Flagg also said officers of different races were assigned to the scene, including black and Hispanic officers.
Songz says he has no connection to the shooter and police have said they have no reason to believe that one exists, although an investigation is still pending. No motive for the shooting has been given.
Trey Songz May Sue Police
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment