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Raleigh police settlements reach $5.4M. Here are allegations and payouts.

Candles burn at a makeshift memorial in a wooded area near a Raleigh shopping center off New Bern Avenue following a vigil for Soheil Antonio Mojarrad in Raleigh. He died after being shot by a Raleigh police officer.
Candles burn at a makeshift memorial in a wooded area near a Raleigh shopping center off New Bern Avenue following a vigil for Soheil Antonio Mojarrad in Raleigh. He died after being shot by a Raleigh police officer. tlong@newsobserver.com
Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

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  • Raleigh paid nearly $5.4 million since 2012 to resolve about 20 claims.
  • Claims involved 49 individuals, included two deaths and serious injury allegations.
  • City often denied wrongdoing, saying it settled to avoid litigation costs.

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Police Payouts

Exclusive News & Observer reporting has revealed that the city of Raleigh paid $5.4 million between 2012 and 2025 to settle accusations of police misconduct. The settlements are linked to a small number of encounters police have with the public. But similarities among the accusations point to problematic behavior, civil rights lawyers and others say.

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Raleigh’s latest settlement involving excessive force accusations against city police pushes the city’s total payouts to nearly $5.4 million since 2012.

The payments include 49 individuals involved in about 20 claims accusing police of wrongdoing that led to significant injuries, including two deaths. In most cases, the city denied wrongdoing, saying the settlements were intended to avoid litigation costs.

The situations represent a very small number of the many encounters police have with the public. But lawyers and others say the cases show patterns of misconduct, including excessive force, that often involve Black residents or those with physical or mental health challenges.

Below is a summary of most of the claims.

Sonya Williams, the mother of Darryl Williams, embraces son Zayvien Williams in 2023 after laying a bouquet of flowers at a memorial on Rocky Quarry Road, near were Darryl Williams died.
Sonya Williams, the mother of Darryl Williams, embraces son Zayvien Williams in 2023 after laying a bouquet of flowers at a memorial on Rocky Quarry Road, near were Darryl Williams died. Robert Willett rwillett@newsobserver.com

Excessive force

Estate of Darryl Williams

  • Settlement amount: $975,000
  • Date of interaction: Jan. 17, 2023
  • Date of settlement: Dec. 2, 2025

Around 2 a.m. Darryl Williams, 32, died after he tried to run from officers. The officer attempted to handcuff Williams after finding a white powder folded in a dollar bill in Williams’ pocket. The city says it used a Taser on Williams three times. The lawsuit, filed by Williams’ mother Sonya, contends it was six in the lawsuit she filed against the city in 2024.

Regardless, before an officer used a Taser on Williams a final time, Williams begged him not to, saying he had a heart condition.

“I have heart problems,” Williams said, gasping for air. “Please. Please.”

After the officer pressed the Taser into Williams, he fell unconscious and was pronounced dead at the hospital.

Darryl Tyree Williams, 32, died in January 2023 after police used a Taser on him multiple times.
Darryl Tyree Williams, 32, died in January 2023 after police used a Taser on him multiple times.

Estate of Keith Collins

  • Settlement amount: $100,000
  • Date of interaction: Jan. 30, 2020
  • Date of settlement: August 2022

Raleigh police Officer W.B. Tapscott responded to a report of Collins walking into Big Lots with a gun in his pants around 3 p.m.

Collins initially ran toward home but turned and pointed the gun at Tapscott, according to Raleigh police and District Attorney Lorrin Freeman.

Collins’ mother, Gloria Mayo, said her son had developmental disabilities and police should have done more to de-escalate the situation.

The city settled with Collins’ family before a lawsuit was filed, according to the family’s attorneys, Ryan Oxendine and Jim Barnes, and documents provided by the city.

Keith Collins was killed by a Raleigh officer on Jan. 30, 2020.
Keith Collins was killed by a Raleigh officer on Jan. 30, 2020.

Family of Soheil Mojarrad

  • Settlement amount: $1.25 million
  • Date of interaction: April 20, 2019
  • Date of settlement: August 2023

Mojarrad, who suffered from mental health issues, took a phone plugged into a wall at a Sheetz, court records say.

Officer Brett Edwards pursued and confronted Mojarrad, 30. Edwards shot Mojarrad multiple times, claiming he feared for his life when Mojarrad advanced toward him with a folding knife while screaming obscenities, the city argued in court filings. Edwards violated police policy when he didn’t turn on his body-camera, city officials said, but he didn’t use excessive force.

The lawsuit contended that Mojarrad didn’t have a knife in his hand and didn’t advance on Edwards. Edwards should have done more to de-escalate the situation, the lawsuit claimed.

Soheil Mojarrad died after being shot by a Raleigh officer in April 2019.
Soheil Mojarrad died after being shot by a Raleigh officer in April 2019.

Fredrick Darnell Hall

  • Settlement amount: $60,000
  • Date of interaction: Aug. 17, 2018
  • Date of settlement: August 2022

Fredrick Darnell Hall, whose family said he had a history of mental health issues and hospitalization, says he was beaten and wrongly arrested by officers while he was having a heat stroke after his car broke down.

Hall became “physically violent” with officers and “reasonable and lawful force” was used to prevent Hall from hurting officers or himself, city attorneys wrote in court documents.

Carlos Barnes

  • Settlement amount:  $13,500
  • Date of incident: May 13, 2014
  • Date of settlement: June 2014

Barnes, 37, was treated for multiple scalp lacerations after being struck on the head several times while officers were attempting to arrest him, according to a letter sent to city officials by Barnes’ attorney, Chad E. Axford, which was provided by the city as part of a public information request.

Lynwood Earl Artis

  • Settlement amount: $35,000
  • Date of interaction: Sept. 11, 2010
  • Date of settlement: 2016

Around 8:45 p.m., Officer James Rollins arrested Artis, who was accused of drinking a beer at a bus stop in the Glenwood South district. Artis denied the beer was his, the lawsuit says.

During the arrest, Rollins kicked Artis to the ground, fracturing his left leg in two places and causing permanent disfigurement, the lawsuit states.

Artis was intoxicated, the city argued in court documents, became confrontational and resisted arrest. After spending a night at the jail in pain, Artis was taken to the hospital, where he had two surgeries embedding pins in his upper and lower legs, Artis contends in the lawsuit.

The district attorney dismissed the charges against Artis after Rollins didn’t show up for court multiple times and said he didn’t recall the incident, the lawsuit states.

Wrongful arrests

Kevin Hines and family

  • Settlement amount: $170,000
  • Date of incident: May 16, 2013
  • Date of settlement: October 2017

Kevin Hines was picking up his two children from Enloe High School on senior prank day and a water balloon fight unfolded, according to a lawsuit filed in 2016.

Hines saw Raleigh Sgt. R. Warner push a Black student to the ground, and Hines went to the principal’s office to complain, the lawsuit says. It contends:

Warner refused to allow Hines to speak to the principal and asked Hines to leave. Warner convinced Hines to leave promising that the officer’s supervisor was on his way.

When Hines walked out, he was arrested by two officers.

Warner and the city indicated in court documents that Hines refused to leave a school building and that he resisted arrest.

In September 2013, the police responded to Hines’ complaint, saying the evidence supports that Hines was arrested without probable cause, according to the lawsuit.

Kevin Hines was charged with trespassing after he objected to the treatment of a Black student by a white officer at Enloe High School in May 2013.
Kevin Hines was charged with trespassing after he objected to the treatment of a Black student by a white officer at Enloe High School in May 2013.

Nyee’ya Williams

  • Settlement amount: $37,500
  • Date of incident: April 4, 2019
  • Date of settlement: March 15, 2021

Williams argued that Raleigh police violated her civil rights when an officer wrongfully arrested her at a downtown Black Lives Matter protest. The city agreed to a settlement with Williams, who was 17 years old when arrested by officers, before a lawsuit was filed.

Nyee’ya Williams, 17,  in June 2020 at a Raleigh protest. In 2023, the city paid Williams $37,500 after she was wrongfully arrested at a protest.
Nyee’ya Williams, 17, in June 2020 at a Raleigh protest. In 2023, the city paid Williams $37,500 after she was wrongfully arrested at a protest. Ben McKeown

Todd Wittlief

  • Settlement amount: $25,000
  • Date of incident: April 4, 2019
  • Date of settlement: March 15, 2021

Wittlief’s civil rights were violated by Raleigh police in connection with a financial fraud investigation and arrest, the settlement agreement states.

A letter from Raleigh police to Wittlief said that police agreed that the officer violated the police ethics policy, but didn’t give any other information. A related lawsuit indicates the police investigation followed when Wittlief tried to ensure the validity of a check written to him by a man buying Wittlief’s deceased father’s medical equipment off Craigslist.

13 men falsely charged, two family members

  • Settlement amount: $2 million
  • Date of interactions: Dec. 1, 2019-May 21, 2020
  • Date of settlement: September 2021

Thirteen men spent a collective 2 1/2 years behind bars before their charges were dismissed. They lost jobs and missed cancer treatments and time with their children, including a newborn, the lawsuit states.

This and a subsequent lawsuit accuse fired Raleigh drug detective Omar Abdullah, a confidential informant and other police officers of collaborating to send innocent men to prison by planting fake drugs.

Abdullah was eventually fired and convicted of a felony obstruction of justice charge in 2023.

Robins Mills, mother of one of the 15 men who received part of a $2 million settlement in a federal civil rights case that contends police and informant framed more than 15 men, posed for a portrait in her apartment in September 2021.
Robins Mills, mother of one of the 15 men who received part of a $2 million settlement in a federal civil rights case that contends police and informant framed more than 15 men, posed for a portrait in her apartment in September 2021. Virginia Bridges vbridges@heraldsun.com

Two youth and one adult

  • Settlement amount:  $135,000
  • Date of interaction: Jan. 2, 2020
  • Date of settlement: February 2023

The money was paid to two youths and one woman related to one of the men Abdullah had arrested. The settlement mentions the man’s arrest, prosecution and alleged seizure of minor children and alleged use of force. The News & Observer isn’t naming the adults in an effort to conceal the children’s identity.

Derrick John Erb

  • Settlement amount:  $22,500
  • Date of interaction: Oct. 3, 2015
  • Date of settlement: Oct. 18, 2019

Derrick John Erb was falsely arrested and charged with swiping Michael Kors watches at Bailey’s Fine Jewelry at Cameron Village. Nichole MacBride, a Raleigh police officer working at Bailey’s, obtained an arrest warrant for Erb by providing incomplete and misleading information to court officials, the complaint states.

When other people confessed to stealing the watches, Erb’s charges were dismissed.

MacBride’s actions were “based on the reasonable, but mistaken, belief that Erb was involved with the thefts from Bailey’s,” the city said in court documents.

Isaac Horton IV and Omeze Nwankwo

  • Settlement amount: $50,000
  • Date of interaction: July 11, 2014
  • Date of settlement: Nov. 7, 2016

Police violated Isaac Horton IV and Omeze Nwankwo’s constitutional rights when officers harassed and wrongly arrested them at Noir nightclub, according to a lawsuit filed in 2015.

An officer asked the men to leave after someone at the business requested it, city attorneys wrote in court documents. Horton said officers mistook him and Nwankwo for two inebriated brothers that went out the back.

Police arrested Nwankwo when he objected to an officer telling Horton to leave, the lawsuit states. Horton was arrested while he took a video of police wrongly arresting Nwankwo, the lawsuit states.

Isaac Horton IV, owner of Oak City Fish and Chips restaurants and food trucks, filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city after he and his business partner were arrested in front of a nightclub in 2014. The charges were dismissed and Raleigh paid the men $50,000 in 2016.
Isaac Horton IV, owner of Oak City Fish and Chips restaurants and food trucks, filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city after he and his business partner were arrested in front of a nightclub in 2014. The charges were dismissed and Raleigh paid the men $50,000 in 2016. Travis Long tlong@newsobserver.com

Improper search, entering property

Kesha Knight

  • Settlement amount: $140,000
  • Date of interaction: Feb, 12, 2020
  • Date of settlement: April 2, 2024

Around 6:30 p.m., Keisha Knight sat at her kitchen table talking to her mother on the phone when Raleigh police “busted through the door to her apartment” with a battering ram and pointed assault rifles at her.

The officers announced themselves as they entered, continuing a pattern of turning a “knock and announce” search warrant into the controversial practice of entering a home without warning. While the officers had a search warrant for Knight’s apartment, it was based on false information, the lawsuit said.

In response to the lawsuit, attorneys for the city said officers had the right to enter the apartment as they were investigating drug activity, in which the evidence could easily be destroyed. They also expected to find a felon with a firearm, the attorneys said.

But officers didn’t find a man, a gun nor drugs, but just Knight, who had no criminal record and lived alone.

During the interaction, Knight started having chest pains and became so anxious that officers called an ambulance, which took Knight to the hospital where she was treated for post-traumatic stress disorder.

Yolanda Irving and Kenya Walton, mothers whose homes were raided in 2020 when Raleigh police officers served a no-knock warrant on the wrong home, hold hands as they speak during a press conference on Monday, Jan. 30, 2023, in Raleigh, N.C.
Yolanda Irving and Kenya Walton, mothers whose homes were raided in 2020 when Raleigh police officers served a no-knock warrant on the wrong home, hold hands as they speak during a press conference on Monday, Jan. 30, 2023, in Raleigh, N.C. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

Yolanda Irving and 10 others

  • Settlement amount: $350,000
  • Date of interaction: May 21, 2020
  • Date of settlement: June 2023

This 2022 lawsuit is the second the city settled involving fired police detective Omar Abdullah and discredited police informant Dennis Williams. It involves three families who say Raleigh police entered two apartments unannounced wearing tactical gear, pointing assault rifles at and detaining innocent women and children as young as 12, including a partially paralyzed youth.

Raleigh police contend that they had the wrong apartment and stopped using the confidential informant the day after the search.

Yolanda Irving and Kenya Walton, mothers whose homes were raided in 2020 when Raleigh police officers served a no-knock warrant on the wrong home, hold hands as they speak during a press conference in January 2023 in Raleigh.
Yolanda Irving and Kenya Walton, mothers whose homes were raided in 2020 when Raleigh police officers served a no-knock warrant on the wrong home, hold hands as they speak during a press conference in January 2023 in Raleigh. Kaitlin McKeown kmckeown@newsobserver.com

Annette Jones

  • Settlement amount: $3,454
  • Date of interaction: Nov. 16, 2016
  • Settlement date: Dec. 23, 2016

Jones and a small dog she had just adopted were outside in her yard early in the morning when a police K-9 who was searching for a suspect in the area came in the yard and attacked the small dog and bit Jones, Jones said. The city agreed to pay for medical bills for the dog after she called the city, according to Jones and city documents.

A Wilson man sued Raleigh police officers Dennis Riley and Eric Vigeant for detaining him in April 2014 and strip-searching him at the Northeast Outreach Center on Capital Boulevard in Raleigh.
A Wilson man sued Raleigh police officers Dennis Riley and Eric Vigeant for detaining him in April 2014 and strip-searching him at the Northeast Outreach Center on Capital Boulevard in Raleigh. Paul A. Specht aspecht@newsobserver.com

Charles Frails

  • Settlement amount: $117,000
  • Date of interaction: April 2, 2014
  • Date of settlement: July 15, 2016

Frails contends police violated his constitutional rights by forcing him to do a strip search after they didn’t find drugs on him during previous searches that followed an unjustified traffic stop.

Officers pulled him and another man over, contending the license plate in the car they were driving was obstructed, and said they smelled marijuana and found a small amount of marijuana in the driver’s sock.

After Frails complained, police sent Frails a letter saying evidence indicated that the officers violated departmental rules related to searches and seizures and to stops and frisks.

David Timothy Faircloth

  • Settlement amount: $7,500
  • Date of interaction: May 4, 2010
  • Date of settlement: May 1, 2012

Officers improperly seized the gun of David Timothy Faircloth after they falsely charged him with failing to disclose a concealed carry permit, the lawsuit contends. After the charges were dismissed, the department refused to return the gun to him, the lawsuit contends.

In court documents, city officials contended that Faircloth didn’t immediately disclose the concealed carry permit despite the fact that he had a loaded pistol in an unfastened holster in the truck. After the charges were dismissed, police said they would release the gun after Faircloth completed a firearm release form and background check, along with getting a court order or the consent of the officer who put the pistol in evidence.

Virginia Bridges covers criminal justice in the Triangle and across North Carolina for The News & Observer. Her work is produced with financial support from the nonprofit The Just Trust. The N&O maintains full editorial control of its journalism.

This story was originally published December 4, 2025 at 5:35 AM.

Virginia Bridges
The News & Observer
Virginia Bridges covers what is and isn’t working in North Carolina’s criminal justice system for The News & Observer’s and The Charlotte Observer’s investigation team. She has worked for newspapers for more than 20 years. The N.C. State Bar Association awarded her the Media & Law Award for Best Series in 2018, 2020 and 2025.
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Police Payouts

Exclusive News & Observer reporting has revealed that the city of Raleigh paid $5.4 million between 2012 and 2025 to settle accusations of police misconduct. The settlements are linked to a small number of encounters police have with the public. But similarities among the accusations point to problematic behavior, civil rights lawyers and others say.