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A California man who was caught on video pummeling a sheriff's deputy and shooting at
her with her own gun in 2019 was found not guilty of attempted murder and other charges
by a jury, with the victim saying the decision sets a bad precedent for law enforcement.
Former San Bernardino County Sheriff's Deputy Meagan McCarthy was the closest law
enforcement officer when a frantic 911 call came in from a mother, pleading with dispatch
for help and for someone to save her from her own son.
McCarthy rushed to the home and saw a man with "clenched fists" who came outside and
then made a "bee-line" in her direction as she got out of her patrol vehicle. Behind him was
his mother, with a knife in her hand and still on the phone with dispatch.
"The 911 call came out for an unknown problem, which basically means there's something
going on, we just don’t know," McCarthy told Fox News Digital. "So the woman on the other
end says to dispatch, ‘Oh, my God, oh, my God! Get my son out of here.’ And she kind of
goes quiet on the line. That prompts a priority 1 response, which means somebody needs
to get there right now."
McCarthy was the first deputy to arrive at the house and the suspect, Ari Young, looked
"very angry," she said. Video taken on a neighbor's cellphone shows he started pummeling
her in the face. He then beat her to the ground, seized her gun and began firing shots in
her direction. Her injuries included a broken thumb and a black eye.
"Based on my training and experience, it was easy to infer that something was going on,"
McCarthy recalled of her initial arrival. "People don’t just arm themselves against their son
with a knife for no reason, and the fact that she had already made these statements to
dispatch was just awful."
The deputy approached Young and attempted to calm the situation and pat him down.
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The September 2019 attack left McCarthy with a broken thumb and a black eye. She also developed post-traumatic stress
disorder that eventually forced her to retire from law enforcement. (Meagan McCarthy)
"Thirteen seconds into our interaction, he told me, ‘I will headbutt the f--- out of you,'" she
recalled. "So I knew his intentions weren’t going to be of compliance."
Video shows that he punched her repeatedly, the two struggled for a gun, and he fired
multiple shots after taking it. McCarthy told Fox News Digital on Wednesday that she had
only survived because the gun jammed the first time he pulled the trigger, aiming directly
at her face.
Young's defense attorney, however, argued that McCarthy had no lawful reason to do what
she was doing, and therefore his client was acting in self-defense.
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McCarthy, pictured with her husband in the summer of 2020. (Meagan McCarthy)
Raj Malin, the defense lawyer, told Los Angeles' ABC 7 that McCarthy did not have
reasonable suspicion to justify patting down his schizophrenic client when she arrived on
scene.
"The issue was, was the initial detention of Mr. Young legal?" he told the station. "If it's not,
then he's not guilty. ... He could punch her 100 times, and it wouldn't matter."
A California jury found Young not guilty of attempted murder and assaulting a peace
officer, instead finding him guilty of the lesser charge of negligent discharge of a firearm,
and failed to reach a verdict on several other allegations, including resisting arrest.
Ari Young is seen holding McCarthy's gun in a still image taken from a neighbor's cellphone video. Multiple shots could be
heard before backup arrived. (Twitter@Esteebanana )
"His whole thing was, I didn’t do my job right. I had no right to detain him. I had no right to
search him," McCarthy told Fox News Digital. "But that’s exactly what we are trained to do.
That’s exactly what peace officer standards in training from the state of California says to
do. It just set him off. It was like a trigger for him."
California State Assemblyman Bill Essayli, R-Riverside, a former federal prosecutor and
deputy district attorney in nearby Riverside County, said the case should have had enough
evidence to secure a conviction — and that there may have been anti-police bias in the
jury.
"[The defense] argued that she didn't have a lawful authority to detain him, and therefore,
he's free to defend himself and do whatever he wants to get away from her, including
beating her up and shooting at her," Essayli told Fox News Digital. "That's not correct.
That's not the law. And I don't think the judge should have allowed that argument to be
presented in that manner."
Additional deputies raced to the scene and shot Young after he seized McCarthy's gun and opened fire. He survived his
injuries, and was later acquitted of attempted murder. (Twitter@Esteebanana )
Following the verdicts, even the county sheriff said in a statement that he is frustrated by
the lack of "meaningful consequences" in the case.
"The video speaks for itself, and more importantly it demonstrates the increasing violence
the public and our deputies experience," San Bernardino County Sheriff-Coroner Shannon
Dicus told Fox News Digital. "I share in the frustration at the lack of accountability for
these brazen and violent crimes, crimes perpetrated by a criminal who created a situation
where law enforcement help was requested, a criminal who repeatedly and brutally
attacked, disarmed, and tried to murder a deputy sheriff."
McCarthy, a mother of two young daughters herself, survived but was forced to retire from
the job she loved due to post-traumatic stress.
Another still from the video shows McCarthy and Young on the ground, struggling over her firearm before he seizes it.
(Twitter@Esteebanana )
"Iloved my job," she told Fox News Digital. "I genuinely woke up every day excited to do
what I was supposed to do and what I swore to do. And the fact that that was taken from
me without me wanting it, makes me upset."
Backup arrived, returned fire and took Young into custody. Although deputies shot him,
Young survived the encounter and walked free after his acquittal on the attempted murder
charge.
"This started from a 911 call from a distraught mother who was so afraid of her adult son
that she had a knife in her hand when the police officer got there," said Betsy Brantner
Smith, a retired police sergeant and the spokesperson for the National Police Association.
"He could’ve easily went and killed his mother, maybe that’s what he was trying to do when
he fired the weapon. But this isn’t just about the officer, either. What about the original
caller — the mother?"
McCarthy could have chosen to wait for backup, avoiding the situation for crucial minutes,
Brantner Smith said.
"Instead she immediately goes to help this woman at great peril to herself," she said. "She
should be commended — not treated as some kind of second-class citizen by the jury."
But McCarthy's treatment sets a sad precedent and could lead other officers to hesitate in
moments of crisis in the future — which could be deadly for law enforcement and for the
citizens they're trying to protect, she said.
"She not only gets beat up, stripped of her firearm and nearly gets killed — she loses her
career," she said. "This is how she pays her mortgage takes care of her family.",
Michael Ruiz is a reporter for Fox News Digital. Story tips can be sent to michael.ruiz@fox.com and
on Twitter: @mikerreports
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