SEATTLE - October 10, 2011
Police officers arrested the 23-year-old man who calls himself
Phoenix Jones early Sunday after he was accused of assaulting
several people with pepper spray. He was booked in county jail on
four counts of assault, with arraignment set for Thursday, police
said Monday.
"Our message has been the same from the beginning, if you see
something that warrants calling 911, call 911," said Seattle
police spokesman Det. Mark Jamieson. "Just because he's dressed up
in costume, it doesn't mean he's in special consideration or above
the law. You can't go around pepper spraying people because you
think they are fighting."
But Jones, who wears a black mask with yellow stripes and a
bulging muscle bodysuit, said he was only trying to stop a street
brawl.
In capital letters, Jones wrote on his Facebook page to say he
wouldn't "ever assault or hurt another person if they were not
causing harm to another human being." He also released a video
shot during the alleged assault.
The often shaky video shows Jones and his sidekick, known as
Ghost, running toward a group of people. Jones said there was a
fight in the group. Police said there's no indication there was a
fight.
The footage goes on to show Jones breaking up the group. Then a
woman screams at him, hitting him with her high-heel shoes. Jones
appears to be holding his pepper spray canister. Moments later a
BMW car appears and speeds away on the street, almost hitting an
unidentified man. Jones chases after the car to get the license
number. A person with Jones is heard calling 911 to report a
hit-and-run.
Jones and his followers then approach the rest of the group down
the block. A woman screams at them to "stay away." Another woman
runs up to Jones and hits him, screaming at him, "You sprayed
(expletive) pepper spray in my eye!"
Two men in the group approach Jones, who then appears to pepper
spray them.
Jones has been the most public face of a group of vigilante
crime stoppers to show up in Seattle in the last couple of years.
His exploits have garnered much media attention, and he's had a
camera crew trailing him in recent months.
Peter Tangen, a volunteer spokesman for Jones, said Monday that
police didn't have any interest in the alleged hit-and-run, but
rather have an agenda against the masked crime fighter.
"They're on a mission to stop Phoenix Jones from what he's
doing, which is legal," Tangen said.
On the police report, the officer wrote that Jones "has had a
history of injecting himself in these incidents. Recently there
have been increased reports of citizens being pepper sprayed by
(Jones) and his group."
The report goes on to say that although Jones "has been advised
to observe and report incidents to 911, he continues to try to
resolve things on his own."
On his Facebook page, Jones has nearly 4,400 friends, and says
that he's married to a woman with the name PurpleReign.
Police weren't buying his Phoenix Jones handle, however. He was
booked under Benjamin John Francis Fodor.
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Online:
Phoenix Jones video: http://bit.ly/pf8Fbv
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Manuel Valdes can be reached at
http://twitter.com/ByManuelValdes.
Seattle 'superhero' arrested, accused of assault
By 6abc
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