According to Peroza-Benitez, as he was hanging from the windowsill with his hands, his feet “dangling,” Haser “repeatedly” punched him in the temple region of his head with a closed fist.
Haser testified that he punched Peroza-Benitez “[o]ne or two times . . . .
[p]robably two,” with the intent to “stun” and “disorient” Peroza-Benitez into compliance “to help him out.” Haser testified that his punches had no effect on Peroza-Benitez, who continued to resist against the officers’ efforts to pull him back inside.
At some point, the officers let go of Peroza-Benitez. “We’re like, screw it, you want to fall, you’re gonna fall. So, we let go of him,” Haser testified. According to Peroza-Benitez, Haser’s punches caused him to fall.
Officer White was among the officers assembled outside the building who witnessed Peroza-Benitez’s fall from the window. Officer White had heard the earlier radio transmission that Peroza-Benitez was armed and assumed that was still the case given that he “did not see a lack of a weapon” on Peroza-Benitez when he was hanging from the window.
Falling feet first, Peroza-Benitez’s leg hit the railing of an elevated porch before landing backwards with a “thud” into a below-ground, concrete stairwell. At this point, officers’ testimony differed as to whether Peroza-Benitez voluntarily moved upon landing; Officer White testified that Peroza-Benitez “started to sit forward” upon landing while another officer testified that “[a]s soon as [Peroza-Benitez] hit the ground, he made a [lunging] motion like he was going to start running again.”