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Watch the shocking true story of retired Supreme Court Justice Margaret Hayes, a 68-year-old Black woman with 38 years of legal service, who was handcuffed and arrested by Officer Ryan Castellano while gardening in her own front yard. The officer's own body camera captured every moment of this racial profiling incident that led to federal prosecution and a $2.3 million settlement. 🔍 What This Video Covers: How a routine 911 call led to an illegal arrest of a distinguished judge The body camera footage that exposed systematic racial discrimination Pattern of 201 discriminatory stops against people of color over 4 years Federal civil rights prosecution under 18 U.S.C. § 242 The 4.5-year federal prison sentence and department-wide reforms How one neighbor's intervention helped document police misconduct ⚖️ Key Takeaways: Justice Hayes had served 17 years on the State Supreme Court, 12 years as a federal district judge, and 9 years as a civil rights attorney. Despite providing identification showing her address, Officer Castellano refused to believe she owned her home—simply because she didn't "fit" his image of who belonged in the affluent neighborhood. The officer's body camera, meant to protect him, became the primary evidence proving systematic civil rights violations that destroyed his career and exposed departmental failures. 📌 Timestamps: The Confrontation Begins Justice Hayes' Background Body Camera Evidence The Arrest Escalates Neighbor Intervenes Federal Investigation Trial and Verdict Settlement and Reforms Lasting Impact 💬 Share your thoughts in the comments: Should officers who systematically discriminate face federal prosecution? How can communities better prevent racial profiling? 👍 If you believe these accountability stories matter, like this video and subscribe for more cases where justice prevails. 📢 Turn on notifications to never miss stories of truth, accountability, and the fight for civil rights.