A jury has awarded $3.6 million to a Colorado woman who claimed that deputies used excessive force when they arrested her and later shocked her with a stun gun while she was restrained.
The Denver Post reports the jury awarded the money to Carolyn O’Neal on Wednesday, finding that Fremont County sheriff’s deputies violated her right to privacy, used excessive force and retaliated against her.
The sheriff’s office did not immediately return the newspaper’s call for comment.
O’Neal sued the sheriff’s office following the May 2014 arrest at the Canon City sober living facility.
Prosecutors later charged O’Neal with resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. A judge dismissed the charges, finding that deputies did not have reason to arrest her.
Topics Lawsuits
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
FEMA Chief Resigns After Six Months, Criticism Over Floods
Lloyd’s Probing Conduct of Ex-CEO Who Had Been Set to Join AIG
‘Clear Soft Market Conditions’ for Commercial P/C Lines in Q3, Says CIAB
Insurance IPOs Hit 20-Year High on Wall Street 

