A woman who was left bloodied and knocked unconscious while handcuffed during her arrest is suing a Michigan police department for excessive force and “disgusting, thug-like conduct,” according to her attorney.

Tiffany McNeil, 31, was arrested at her Coldwater home on July 24, after her husband called police during a domestic dispute. She was then taken to the Branch County Jail, where video released by her attorney, Solomon Radner, shows her inside a sally port to the county jail. An officer — identified in the lawsuit as Lewis Eastmead — is standing behind McNeil, who had been drinking alcohol earlier that day, according to her lawsuit filed this week in US District Court.

McNeil, whose face was pressed into a wall at the time, then cursed at Eastmead, according to the lawsuit obtained by the Coldwater Daily Reporter. That prompted Eastmead to grab McNeil by the hair and spin her around while slamming the woman into the ground face-first while still handcuffed, or “far more excessive” force than necessary.

“After being slammed to the ground face-first, Ms. McNeil hit the ground so hard that blood gushed from her face and she lost consciousness,” according to the lawsuit, which claims Eastmead and another officer filed false police reports to justify charging McNeil with resisting arrest. “[Eastmead] then got on top of her, delivering kneestrikes to her unconscious body.”

McNeil was taken to a hospital and received 17 stitches over her eye. She also had a concussion, Radner told the Detroit Free Press.

The excessive force lawsuit — which names Eastmead, roughly a dozen other cops and supervisors, as well as the city of Coldwater — seeks at least $75,000 in damages. Eastman could not be reached for comment, according to the newspaper.

The city’s manager said officials were reviewing the lawsuit and declined additional comment.

Radner said prosecutors dropped the resisting arrest charge after she pleaded no contest to domestic violence. McNeil was later sentenced to 93 days in jail by a judge, but the sentence was suspended after 23 days of time served on the condition that she not be arrested within a year, according to the Coldwater Daily Reporter.