
"It was a willful and deliberate act of police brutality."

"This was no accident or split-second mistake," Busansky wrote. In an op-ed published by the Washington Post, Alex Busansky, a former Justice Department lawyer who helped prosecute Mohr, called the pardon "the most insensitive and inflaming" granted by Trump "in a year that witnessed the killing of George Floyd." "There are issues with police brutality in our country," she said. "I was not a police officer who participated in that."

Mohr's pardon comes amid a nationwide reckoning on police brutality following the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. But Mohr, now 50, said her actions did not amount to police brutality.
