“Officer Martin was contrite,” Fort Worth Police Chief Joel Fitzgerald told reporters on Monday. “He’s ready to get back to work. He is very sorry for what has transpired. However, I challenged him, as I challenged many — and that was to get back into the neighborhood and to reestablish relationships that we feel were damaged by what we saw on that video.”

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Martin — a white officer who Fitzgerald said will also “go through some training” — late last month arrested Jacqueline Craig and her teenage daughters during a confrontation that was captured on camera.

The six-minute, profanity-laced video clip, which was shared on Facebook, begins as Craig was trying to explain to the officer that a man had grabbed her young son. The child had apparently thrown something and wouldn’t pick it up.

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“You could’ve [come] to me,” Craig tells the man, who appears to be standing nearby. “Don’t put your hands on my son.”

“Well, why don’t you teach your son not to litter,” the officer responded.

Craig countered that it didn’t really matter if her son littered — that action did not give the man “the right to put his hands” on her son.

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“Why not?” the officer said.

At that, a voice can be heard saying that the exchange is live on Facebook, and Craig appears to grow more distressed. She points out that the officer doesn’t know what she teaches her son and that sometimes children don’t follow the rules of their parents when there are no adults around.

“You just pissed me off, telling me what I teach my kids and what I don’t,” she says.

“If you keep yelling at me, you’re going to piss me off, I’m going to take you to jail,” the officer responds.

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One of Craig’s teenage daughters apparently tries to intervene, stepping between her mother and the officer, but the situation quickly spirals downward. The officer grabs the girl from behind. Craig winds up on the ground, with a stun gun pointed in her back — a device that is later turned on others watching the scene unfold.

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The Star-Telegram reported that Craig and two of her daughters were “placed in police vehicles and taken away from the house” during the incident.

“This entire situation will be referred to the Tarrant County District Attorney’s Office for the equitable review of any criminal matters that occurred during the aforementioned incident,” a Fort Worth police news release stated.

Sam Jordan, a spokeswoman for the Tarrant County Criminal District Attorney’s Office, says the case will be presented to a grand jury in its entirety, but a date had not been set as of Monday. She says the grand jury will then decide whether the officer, the mother and her daughters or the neighbor involved in the altercation that drew police will face any criminal charges.

According to the Star-Telegram, Martin is appealing the disciplinary action.

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“Clearly, we do not agree with the findings contained in the chief’s disciplinary letter,” his attorney, Terry Daffron, told the Star-Telegram in a statement. “We look forward to a fair, neutral, and impartial hearing process, free from political pressure and influence, one where Officer Martin will finally have a ‘voice’ and all of the evidence will be considered by the arbitrator.”

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The suspension begins Tuesday, according to a letter posted to Twitter.

In a Facebook video posted Monday, Lee Merritt, an attorney for Craig and her family, called the punishment a “10-day vacation.”

“The Fort Worth Police Department has failed the city of Fort Worth and the people of Fort Worth,” Merritt said in the Facebook video. “They’ve sent a clear message out to the African American community and the world community. And I don’t care how many black faces they put in uniform, they put a message out that our lives are simply less valuable.”

Fitzgerald, the police chief, said Monday that officials who looked into the incident examined the video from Facebook and body-camera footage. They reviewed in-car video and listened to the initial 911 tapes that came in.

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There are “so many things that go into every investigation, and we really left no stone unturned,” he said. “We want to reassure members of the public that again, this is an isolated incident, this is something that as an organization we handled internally, because we can be trusted to look at ourselves critically and make the corrections necessary that we need to make to ensure that officers provide the amount of service that’s expected here in the city of Fort Worth.”

Peter Holley and Avi Selk contributed to this report.