accusing them of being responsible for the woman's apparent suicide in a county jail.
The suit, which was filed in a
federal court in Texas, said that officials violated her constitutional
rights. The family was seeking damages but no monetary amount was listed
in the court papers.
Bland,
who is black, was pulled over in her car on July 10 by a white state
trooper, Brian Encinia, for failing to signal a lane change.
The
discovery of Bland's body in her cell on July 13 with a trash bag
around her neck in an apparent hanging provoked suspicions of racist
treatment.
Local officials
have said she was not mistreated in jail. Still, her death has helped
fuel growing criticism of U.S. policing amid a string of incidents
involving the treatment of minorities by police across the United
States.
The lawsuit said
Encinia "intentionally, willfully, wantonly, and unreasonably deprived
Sandra Bland of her rights, privileges and immunities secured by the
U.S. Constitution."
In addition to Encinia, the suit
named the Texas Department of Public Safety, Waller County, the
county's sheriff's department and two jailers as defendants.
The
Texas Department of Public Safety has said Encinia acted improperly in
making the stop. Bland, 28, was pulled over by near Prairie View,
northwest of Houston, for failing to signal a lane change.
The
stop escalated into a verbal altercation after Encinia asked Bland to
put out a cigarette and she refused. Bland was arrested and charged with
assaulting an officer, a felony, with the incident recorded by the
police car's dashboard camera.
The suit also says her jailers did not do enough to protect or provide medical care.
Bland's
family previously acknowledged a Facebook post by the 28-year-old
Chicago-area native in which she discussed struggling with depression,
but they have disputed officials' suicide ruling.
"Waller County Jail personnel ... were willful, wanton,
and
reckless in exhibiting a conscious disregard for the safety of Sandra
Bland in failing to keep her in a safe and suitable environment where
she could be kept free from injury, harm, and death," it said.
Source: Reuters
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