A Multnomah County jury declined Thursday to award any money to a 115-pound woman who suffered a broken wrist when two

officers tried to pull her out of the open window of her car as they arrested her for drunken driving.

Morgan Harty actually wasn't drunk -- about an hour later, she blew .03 percent on a Breathalyzer, well below the legal limit of .08. Officers had tried to yank the 24-year-old out of her car after she refused to submit to field sobriety tests, but said she would blow into a Breathalyzer -- which the law allows.

During a four-day trial in

, Harty testified that the officers told her she was under arrest just as they grabbed her arms.

But Officers Erick Thorsen and Michael Villanti testified that they told Harty as many as 10 seconds before they grabbed her that she was under arrest and needed to get out of her car -- and that they repeated those orders.

Jurors were asked to decide whether Villanti committed battery by using a control hold to twist Harty's arm, causing the break during the stop about 1 a.m. Sept. 21, 2011. Jurors voted 9-3 that Villanti hadn't used unreasonable force.

Harty had sought $563,000 -- about $123,000 for past and future medical costs, counseling and lost wages, and the rest for pain and suffering.

Video recorded from Villanti's patrol car didn't capture the officers' initial conversation with Harty, but it did start recording sound just as Thorsen reached into Harty's car. Villanti follows.

Harty can be heard screaming "Ow, ow, you're hurting my arm!" and then, "You broke my ... arm!" A short while later, she also complains "my wrist is throbbing and swollen."

After one of the officers tells her to open the door and Harty says it's locked, one of them lets go of an arm. The officers then open the door and handcuff her.

The Portland Police Bureau's internal affairs unit and the Independent Police Review Division had looked at whether to open an official investigation into the traffic stop. Sgt. Pete Simpson said the internal affairs unit decided not to formally investigate after finding the officers didn't commit any policy violations. The Independent Police Review Division didn't return a call seeking comment Thursday.

-- Aimee Green