SAN ANTONIO -- The San Antonio Police Department is reviewing police body-camera footage after a bystander posted video online that appears to show an officer punching an eighth-grade girl three or four times outside a birthday party last weekend.
Mayor Ivy Taylor issued a statement saying the video "is hard to watch and listen to," and the department is reviewing the police body-camera footage to determine exactly what happened.
The grainy footage was shot late Saturday outside an event center where authorities said officers were called about men fighting at a quinceanera, a Hispanic tradition of celebrating a girl's 15th birthday.
The 14-year-old girl was arrested on a charge of assaulting a public servant, a San Antonio police spokeswoman said.
Artessia House, a lawyer for the girl, denied the teen struck the officer.
She told the San Antonio Express-News the girl is an honor-roll student with no history of violence.
The girl was taken to a juvenile-detention center Saturday and was released Monday after appearing in juvenile court.
House did not reply to a phone message left Wednesday by The Associated Press.
Police chief William McManus said in a statement the teen's arrest is being reviewed "to ensure compliance with department policies."
Police officials have declined to release the officer's name.
An incident report described a volatile scene outside the event center, with multiple people fighting and onlookers angered by the police response, with many "on the verge of interfering."
The girl was in the crowd with her mother and brother.
The video appears to show the girl step toward the officer before he strikes her for the first time.
He lunges forward and delivers another blow, causing her to twist backward and fall into people standing nearby.
He appears to hit her again before he and other officers grab her and arrest her.
The teen's mother can be heard screaming as other officers restrain her daughter.
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