The white sheriff’s deputy caught on video flipping a black high school student out of her classroom chair in Columbia, South Carolina, has been fired, a sheriff said on Wednesday.

Deputy Ben Fields violated agency policy when he picked up the teenage girl and threw her across a classroom as he attempted to make an arrest, Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott told a news conference.

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“That is not a proper technique and should not be used by law enforcement,” Lott said.

Videos filmed by students showed Fields, 34, slam a 16-year-old girl to the ground and drag her across a classroom at Spring Valley High School on Monday after she apparently refused to hand her mobile phone to a teacher or leave the room.

RELATED: Sheriff Leon Lott blames flipped teen for police assault: She started this whole incident

The student, who Lott said hit the officer during the altercation, was arrested on a charge of disturbing schools.

“She was very disruptive, she was very disrespectful and she started this whole incident with her actions,” the sheriff said.

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Lott said the student was not hurt. But the girl’s lawyer told ABC’s Good Morning America on Wednesday that she suffered injuries after being “brutally attacked.”

“She now has a cast on her arm, she has neck and back injuries,” lawyer Todd Rutherford said. “She has a Band-Aid on her forehead where she suffered rug burn.”

The deputy has not been criminally charged. The Federal Bureau of Investigation and Justice Department opened a civil rights probe into the arrest, which prompted a hashtag #AssaultAtSpringValleyHigh and widespread outrage on social media and in Columbia after the video footage went viral.

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The sheriff said a teacher and administrator who witnessed the encounter felt the officer had acted appropriately.

“They had no problems with the physical part,” Lott said. “I’m the one who had a problem with it.”

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Fields, who has not commented on the incident, had worked for the sheriff’s office since 2004 and joined its school resource officer program in 2008. An elementary school where he is also assigned presented him with a “Culture of Excellence Award” last year.

(Additional reporting and writing by Colleen Jenkins in Winston-Salem, N.C.; Editing by James Dalgleish)