In this June 5, photo, Mussallina Muhaymin, left, and Zarinah Tavares, sisters of Muhammad Abdul Muhaymin Jr., a homeless manwho died while in Phoenix police custody, pose in Phoenix.Photo: AP Matt York

PHOENIX—An advocacy group released what they say is previously before unseen body camera footage showing Phoenix police mocking the religion of a Black Muslim man who later died in their custody.

Muslim Advocates, a national civil rights organization, released video from the 2017 death of Muhammad Abdul Muhaymin Jr. in which he can be heard crying out in pain and calling for Allah, the Arabic word for God.

An officer appears to say “Allah? He’s not going to help you right now. … Relax dude. Stop moving. Stop resisting. You understand?”

The Phoenix Police Department is disputing that interpretation, Sgt. Mercedes Fortune said. He said the police were trying to defuse the situation as per their training.

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“In fact, the officers did not mock or target Mr. Muhaymin based on his religion, race, or any other factor,” Sgt. Fortune said in an email. “When Mr. Muhaymin is heard to say ‘Please Allah,’ the officer responded, ‘Allah? We’re trying to help you right now dude so relax.’”

Previous body camera footage from the police included Mr. Muhaymin’s plea that he couldn’t breathe, but left out the statements related to his faith.

David Chami, the attorney representing the Muhaymin family in a lawsuit against the city, said he’s certain that police deliberately left out this portion of the video when it was initially given to the media.

“We think this type of information will help maybe get somebody to take a second look whether these officers should still be patrolling this neighborhood,” Atty. Chami said. “There’s no doubt that the city manipulated the narrative.”

Any records related to the incident were released to media and other parties the first time they requested them, Atty. Fortune said.

Mr. Muhaymin’s sister was left angered by the footage.

“The city of Phoenix and the Phoenix police targeted my brother for his race, they mocked him for his religion and disability, and then brutally killed him,” Mr. Muhaymin’s sister, Mussallina Muhaymin, said in a statement. “Muhammad Muhaymin, Jr., was a man, a man with a family who loved him.”

She has said her brother was homeless and suffered from post-traumatic stress disorder and schizophrenia.

None of the officers have been criminally charged or faced internal discipline for their actions.

Daniel O’Connor, a lawyer defending the officers in the suit, said in an email Aug. 20 that he is prohibited from discussing ongoing litigation. Fortune also said she could not comment on other specifics of the case citing the same reason.

Mr. Muhaymin’s family, who have filed a $10 million wrongful death suit against the city, see echoes of his killing in George Floyd’s death at the hands of Minneapolis police officers in May. It will likely not go to trial until early next year, Atty. Chami said. Attorneys are also looking into opening a federal investigation to see if Mr. Muhaymin’s civil rights were violated.

The incident began when police were called to the community center in the city’s Maryvale neighborhood in January 2017 after a dispute arose over whether Mr. Muhaymin could bring his service dog into a public bathroom.

Mr. Muhaymin was eventually allowed to go into the bathroom. But officers ran a records check and discovered he had an outstanding warrant for failing to appear in court for a misdemeanor drug-paraphernalia possession charge.

Once outside the community center, tensions rose as an officer told Mr. Muhaymin to put down his dog because he was under arrest. An officer knocked the dog out of Mr. Muhaymin’s hands after he said he didn’t have anyone to care for the animal, according to the lawsuit.

Mr. Muhaymin was forced to the ground after police asked him to cooperate, and he screamed in pain as officers handcuffed him. An officer made a profane, belittling comment to Mr. Muhaymin that he was now facing a felony.

After officers brought Mr. Muhaymin to a police SUV in the parking lot, officers again urged Mr. Muhaymin to stop moving. Still, the struggle continued, with officers again forcing him to the ground. “I can’t breathe,” Mr. Muhaymin said.

Minutes later, the 43-year-old Muhaymin went into cardiac arrest, began vomiting and died, the lawsuit said.

After a review, the Maricopa County Attorney’s Office declined in February 2018 to criminally charge the officers involved, saying it didn’t believe the officers committed acts that warranted prosecution.

Transcripts and video from depositions in the case became available after a federal judge in June denied a request made by the city of Phoenix to bar their release.

The request was made after attorneys for the city accused a lawyer representing Mr. Muhaymin’s sister of using social media to garner news coverage and incite violence against officers.(AP)