Nineteen-year-old Braylen Kizzee is a college freshman who plays football at University of Mary Hardin-Baylor in Texas. The college student also dreams to follow in his fatherโs footsteps in law enforcement, but a Dec. 3 incident with police has left a sour taste in his mouth.
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While driving back to school on that Tuesday morning, Kizzee was entering the Fort Bend toll road when he said an unmarked truck cut him off and another rammed into his driver side door, according to ABC 13. โI really thought someone was trying to jack me for my car,โ Kizzee said.
Instead, one of the drivers in the unmarked vehicle rolled down his window, aimed his gun at Kizzee, and started yelling at the 19-year-old to โโshow me your hands before I blow your head off.โโ The teen told ABC 13, โhe made me crawl to the passenger side and get out on my hands and knees and go to the cop car.โ
The freshman followed directions, but it wasnโt until one of the four officers pulled off Kizzeeโs hat that they realized they had the wrong guy. โIf he made one wrong move, I probably would be burying my son,โ his father, Byron, said. โIโm not okay with that. I want everybody held accountable.โ
The officers were actually after a man who they say robbed multiple ATMs in Kentucky. The fugitive is descried as 6-foot-1 with neck tattoos, according to Click 2 Houston News. โI donโt know how they couldโve gotten us mixed up,โ Kizzee said. He has no tattoos, is about four inches shorter than the suspect, and most importantly, the college linebacker has no criminal record.
His father, who is a police officer himself, said he also doesnโt know how such a damaging mistake couldโve happened. โIf you was watching him with binoculars like you say, then itโs obvious you seen itโs not your suspect,โ he said. Kizzeeโs mother, on the other hand, said thereโs only one similarity between the suspect and the teen. โThe only thing that... the person that they were looking for and my son have in common, is that they were Black,โ she said.
In addition to the traumatic events, Kizzee also said his knees were mildly injured from crawling, and there are several dents in his car from the initial impact. The officers involved visited the Kizzee house to apologize and produce a claim for damages to Kizzeeโs car, according to ABC 13.
โNothing they did was procedure,โ Bryon, continued to ABC 13. โYou never identified yourself. Youโre in unmarked cars. The unit behind him, that was marked, never turned on the lights. Itโs terrifying.โ
Kizzee told Click 2 Houston that he canโt sleep at night and even fears the three hour commute back to his college. Heโs studying criminal justice in school in hopes of being better than the officers who pulled him over. โThat just teaches me to always follow procedure because I wouldnโt want to wish that on any other human being,โ he said to ABC 13.
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