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Idaho jury finds man in viral police incident guilty. Officer criticized, too

Idaho jury finds man in viral police incident guilty. Officer criticized, too

Yahoo08-05-2025
On Wednesday evening, a jury found Samson Allen guilty on charges of resisting arrest and obstructing justice during a police encounter last June that culminated in the arresting officer pressing his knee to the young Meridian man's neck.
Videos of the incident went viral and sparked concerns over then-Meridian Police Officer Bradley Chambers' use of force, which became subject to an internal review, the department announced in October. During the trial Wednesday, jurors considered video footage of the incident, including from police body cameras and patrol cars and videos captured by Allen's brothers. They also heard testimony from Meridian police officers, Chambers and Allen himself.
Prosecutors argued that Allen failed to comply with Chambers' commands on June 30, 2024, namely for Allen to remove a dirt bike from the bed of his truck for Chambers' investigation and to step back from the truck. Allen's attorney, Ryan Black of Boise, argued that the commands were not lawful and that Allen was not given adequate time nor the clarity needed to comply.
Jurors sided with the prosecution after just over an hour of deliberation. And while Black failed to convince jurors that Chambers acted outside of his 'course and scope of his duties as a law enforcement officer,' other Meridian officers' testimony revealed concerns about Chambers' actions.
Allen's arrest began with a dirt-bike accident involving his younger brother, Parks, 16, who had spun out of control in a residential neighborhood in Meridian. While Parks was transported to the hospital, Allen and another brother, Gannon, 18, loaded the over-200-pound bike into Allen's truck. Chambers approached the brothers, telling them, 'That's not gonna work,' according to police body-cam footage. 'Take it out of the truck.'
Allen asked Chambers if he wanted to take photographs of the bike and refused to unload the bike, while Gannon filmed the interaction. Roughly one minute into the interaction, Chambers approached Allen from behind, ordered him to step back, grabbed his right wrist and eventually forced him to the ground, where Chambers pressed his knee to Allen's neck for nearly a minute.
Though the findings of the internal review have not been released, two Meridian officers involved in the review took the stand during Allen's trial. Sergeants Brandon Fiscus and Justin Dance stated that while Chambers did not violate Meridian policy or standards, or Idaho law, his actions raised red flags on a few fronts.
Fiscus, the head of the Meridian Police Department's Office of Professional Standards, noted that Chambers didn't use many deescalation tactics and that the situation could've gone differently had Chambers better explained why he needed the bike. Fiscus also expressed that Chambers could have waited for more officers to arrive on the scene and said that he is sometimes concerned when officers 'want to resolve things so quickly.' Fiscus was also concerned by the 'truthfulness' of some of Chambers' statements to his sergeant, Bryan Albers, after the incident, though he said he believed the officer was not intending to mislead anyone but rather made an 'excited utterance' while still energized from the interaction.
Fiscus testified that the internal review did not find any wrongdoing, but that Chambers' actions could not be considered 'best practices.'
Chambers left Meridian Police in September and was quickly hired by Boise police. In February, Haley Williams, a Boise police spokesperson, told the Idaho Statesman in an email that Chambers was 'separated' from Boise police on Jan. 17. Williams declined to say why. Chambers testified Wednesday that he is now employed as an officer in Napa County, California, where he worked before moving to Idaho.
The judge presiding over the case, Ada County Magistrate Judge Michael Lojek, sentenced Allen to three months of unsupervised probation and entered a sentence withholding judgment. If Allen successfully completes his probation, he may apply to have the guilty verdict removed from his record and the case dismissed, which Lojek said he has 'every expectation' will happen.
Lojek declined to order Allen to perform community service or take any behavioral class, as was advocated by the prosecutors, saying he believed Allen has 'learned (his) lesson.'
Lojek also told the courtroom he 'thought it was shocking to say the least' that Chambers struggled on the witness stand to articulate his training in deescalation and that he 'can imagine several scenarios' in which Chambers could have acted differently and potentially created a different outcome.
Lojek called Allen a 'smart young man who was put in a difficult situation' and said he hoped Allen could 'get past this' without 'animosity.'
'When I was 22 years old, I was arrested in the city of Boise for resisting and obstructing,' Lojek told Allen and the court.
'You'll never forget it, but I hope that you can find some peace with it.'
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