A recording from an Aurora police officer’s body camera released Friday by the American Civil Liberties Union shows a man being shocked with a Taser for what the ACLU says was “no reason.”

The edited video, which lasts about a minute and a half, shows an officer firing his Taser into the back of a man facing away from him.

“What are we being detained for?” the man yells just before he is struck by the device. “Answer my question officer! I know my rights!”

Aurora police say the encounter happened on Feb. 19 and that the man involved was arrested and charged in the city’s municipal court with failing to obey lawful orders, a misdemeanor.

The ACLU says the officers involved in the encounter stopped the man, identified as Darsean Kelley, while they were looking for a suspect who purportedly pulled a gun on a child. The organization says authorities had no description but stopped Kelley, who was near the location where the report was called in.

“I know my rights,” Kelley says in the video after declining to sit down at the commands of officers, citing a groin injury.

After being his with the Taser, Kelley is shown in the video sitting down, apparently in handcuffs, saying he didn’t do anything wrong and that he wanted to talk to the boss of the officer who shocked him.

“It’s all on video, sweetheart,” an officer tells him.

According to the ACLU, the municipal charges against Kelley were dropped after the agency came to his defense.

Aurora police referred questions on the encounter to a post on their Facebook page.

“The force review board is empaneled (sic) to review uses of force to determine compliance with standard operating procedures, department directives and applicable law,” Aurora police said in the post. “The FRB determined the force applied in this incident was within policy.”

#CommunityCommitment A message from Chief of Police Nick Metz can be found here https://t.co/qgyZ5V3xwd https://t.co/N7USJVbRpm — Aurora Police Dept (@AuroraPD) September 9, 2016

However, the police department says Chief Nick Metz has directed a separate internal review board to review the encounter. The IRB may be used to review incidents that attract significant community interest, police say, and is staffed by a group of supervisory officers and citizens.

“The panel will consider documents related to the case and hear from the involved parties,” police said in a statement. “Once all testimony has been presented, a deliberations process will begin. Following the IRB hearing, a recommendation of discipline will be forwarded to the chief of police for review.”

Mark Silverstein, legal director for the ACLU of Colorado, says he thinks the use of force was unjustified and that the video shows officers stopping two young black men doing nothing other than walking down the street. He called the use of force “objectively unreasonable” and said he hoped the video’s release by the ACLU can be a used as a vehicle for awareness.

“I think it’s an important educational tool about constitutional rights,” Silverstein said.