San Francisco

Bay Area Activist Said She Was Sedated for Protesting, Decides to Sue San Francisco

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A Bay Area woman is suing San Francisco because, she says, a paramedic sedated her for protesting. The incident happened when security guards threw her out of a Warriors championship game for demonstrating over Roe v. Wade. Sergio Quintana reports.

A Bay Area woman is now suing San Francisco because she was forcibly sedated by a paramedic for protesting, she said.

The woman said it all began when she was taken out by force from a Warriors championship game for protesting the overturning of Roe v. Wade.

Abortion rights activist Kareim McKnight and her civil rights attorney John Burris held a news conference Wednesday outside Chase Center and detailed the situation.

McKnight said she was surprised by how Chase Center security reacted to her act of civil disobedience during the game. But she was even more surprised when she said a San Francisco police sergeant told her she'd be sedated if she didn't comply with orders.

"And while I was on the ground, handcuffed in front of the emergency vehicle, one of the firefighters came with a needle towards me," she explained.

According to medical records shown to NBC Bay Area by the plaintiff, firefighters injected McKnight with five milligrams of a powerful sedative called Versed.

The lawsuit isn't seeking a specific amount in damages. Rather, attorney Burris wants to know why his client was injected with a sedative in the first place.

"She was on a gurney. She had handcuffs on her. She was not a threat to anyone else. She certainly wasn't a threat to herself," he said.

Burris said he's aware sedatives are sometimes used during arrests when the suspect is violent and under the influence of drugs or alcohol, but McKnight said she was sober.

NBC Bay Area reached out to the San Francisco Fire Department and the San Francisco Police Department for comment, but they referred us to the city attorney.

"We have yet to be served with the lawsuit. We will review it once we are served and respond appropriately," a city attorney spokesperson said in an email.

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