Assistant Commissioner Luke Cornelius said he was "very concerned" by the security footage. Photos / Twitter, ABC
A group of police officers will be investigated after being caught on camera pinning down, beating and dousing a Melbourne disability pensioner with capsicum spray and a garden hose.
Victoria's anti-corruption commission will now investigate the incident outside the pensioner's Preston home in September which was caught on CCTV.
Assistant Commissioner Luke Cornelius said he was "very concerned" by the security footage obtained by the Age and shared with the ABC.
"The members involved clearly needed to be called to account for their conduct," he told reporters today.
But Cornelius added it was not police practice to stand down officers when a complaint was made. Any such decision would follow the outcome of any Independent Broad-based Anti-corruption Commission's investigation.
Robinson Gill Lawyers accuse six officers of mistreating their client, named only as John, after arriving at his Preston home to conduct a welfare check.
John's CCTV system showed him trying to fend off the officers before being capsicum sprayed and dragged onto his lawn, where he was sprayed again.
"F***ing idiot, do you like that? Do you like that? Smells good, doesn't it?" an officer is heard saying.
"Victoria Police, as the nation's best police force, conduct themselves with professionalism and in my experience proportionate to the risk that they face," he said.
Opposition Leader Matthew Guy labelled John's case "abhorrent" and said it highlighted the need for a better police complaints system.
"All Victorians will be outraged by it," he said.
An IBAC report last week found Victoria Police failed to adequately manage conflicts of interests, consider human rights and examine relevant evidence in serious incidents when people were hurt or killed.
King previously told a parliamentary inquiry into police oversight an independent body was needed to investigate allegations of misconduct.
While Victoria Police continue to reject calls for such a body, Cornelius said the public needed to be assured "mates are not investigating mates".