Cleveland resident Conor O鈥橞oyle is suing Cuyahoga County, several officials from the county and a sheriff鈥檚 deputy for injuries he received during the May 30, 2020 protests in Downtown Cleveland.
鈥淲hat I would like from all of this is the police to be held accountable,鈥 O鈥橞oyle said. 鈥淲e expect these officers to protect and serve, to uphold the laws. I guess first and foremost to not do harm.鈥
According to the lawsuit in federal court, O鈥橞oyle was at the protest handing out food, water and other supplies to participants. Shortly after officers began firing tear gas canisters into the crowd, he ran in to give water to someone hit by a canister.
鈥淚t was absolute pandemonium,鈥 O鈥橞oyle said. 鈥淭here were people running, people getting tear gassed, people bleeding, people crying.鈥
He said after dropping off the water, he started to walk back to the small park across from the Justice Center with his hands in the air. While walking away, he was hit in the back of the head with a bean bag round. It鈥檚 not clear who fired the round, but the lawsuit names one sheriff鈥檚 deputy 鈥 Bruce Lourie 鈥 as the likely shooter.
鈥淚t was just such a surprise to me to be shot in the back of the head while my hands were raised in the air. I could not believe it,鈥 O鈥橞oyle said.
O鈥橞oyle was transported to the hospital for wounds on the back of his head and arm and has fully recovered.
The lawsuit also names Cuyahoga County Executive Armond Budish, former interim Sheriff David Schilling and former Safety Services Director Alex Pellom.
O鈥橞oyle鈥檚 attorney, Dan Shields of Lakewood, said the county failed to prepare its sheriff鈥檚 deputies to respond to protests like the one in response to George Floyd鈥檚 killing by police two years ago.
鈥淲e want to bring attention to not just the shot itself, which of course was damaging, but also to the training and how our police and sheriffs deal with protests,鈥 Shields said.
The sheriff鈥檚 department made several changes since May 30, 2020, including training deputies on the use of nonlethal weapons like exploding tear gas and shotguns that fire bean bag rounds.
O鈥橞oyle is asking for $75,000 in damages from the county and a full accounting of what happened that day.
鈥淚 never expected my story to be publicized like this, and I never really had any hope that I would ever be able to see any footage from the Justice Center or the cameras on the courthouse or any of the buildings downtown,鈥 O鈥橞oyle said. 鈥淚f I could, that would be wonderful, because it would prove what I鈥檓 saying is true.鈥