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SACRAMENTO -- She was the woman heard screaming during a violent struggle between Regional Transit staff, Sacramento police and her boyfriend.

Now out on bond on a charge of resisting an officer, Stacey Bledsoe just wants answers about how a ticket check turned into this.

"They're holding him down by his head and his neck, and he wants to shoot him with a stun gun. You shoot people with a stun gun that's out of control and that you can't get a handle on to get them down -- not someone who's already pinned down by two officers," said Bledsoe.

As she questions officer behavior at the 13th Street light rail station Wednesday as revealed through a bystander's cell phone video, Regional Transit has now released the silent video of the incident captured by its station cameras.

"There was actually a lengthy contact before it got actually more resistive in nature," said Captain Norm Leong, the vice president of Safety and Security for Regional Transit.

There was actually about six minutes worth of talking before any struggle began.

Regional Transit maintains the physical fight only started when Bledsoe's boyfriend, Golden Smith, refused to sign a citation for failure to stop for transit staff and wouldn't put his hands behind his back once officers discovered there was a revocation note in his parole history.

His mother believes otherwise.

"He's a target," sighed Rhonda Miller.

According to Miller, his 6-foot-4-inch size and the color of his skin have unfairly put him in officers' sights in the past when he's been arrested for issues connected to being homeless.

She says he's only been out of jail for eight months, having served four years for his role in a fight.

Now he's back behind bars for hitting two officers and resisting.

Miller says her son takes medication for anxiety and depression he developed after past abuse by police in San Jose.

Smith and his girlfriend were headed to Cosumnes River College and had paid their train fares so they don't understand why they were on the receiving end of such treatment by RT.

"He's slinging me around like a rag doll," Bledsoe said.

"There's always a use review on how our force was, how our interaction was, and we'll take a look at all those things in more detail and have several layers of review before we make any judgement," said Leong.

"They're supposed to be peace officers. They're supposed to keep the peace when actually they were the ones that were causing the disturbance," said Bledsoe.

In addition to the charge filed against her in Sacramento County Wednesday, Bledsoe is facing six warrants out of Merced County.

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