The 911 caller said a man had come to Fisher Brewing, attacked a person at the door and was "running around crazy. Very erratic. He just jumped in and out of the road."
"Definitely mental health issues," the caller said. "So if you've got mental health resources, send them out."
Instead, bodycam footage shows a police officer getting out of his patrol car and ordering Brandon to stop. When he resists and puts up a fist and appears to reach for the officer's holstered pistol, another officer pushes Brandon to the ground and the two officers try to pin him down. "Stop," one of the officers says repeatedly as Brandon is on a gravel bed between the road and the sidewalk and continuing to push against the officers.
No de-escalation attempts by the police are visible or audible in the footage from nine body-worn cameras, even though an executive order signed by Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall two years ago requires all Salt Lake City Police Department officers to use de-escalation techniques before using force.
"De-escalation tactics are no longer suggested or preferred — they are mandatory prior to use force to effect an arrest unless it would be unreasonable to do so," Mendenhall said in announcing the police reforms, which were prompted in part by the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police in 2020.
Salt Lake City Police Department spokesperson Brent Weisberg said of the incident: "As the body-worn camera video shows, this is a situation that rapidly unfolded. It was a chaotic situation and our officers were required to make very fast decisions to get a situation under control that was very tense."
Before Brandon walked into Fisher Brewing, he had been taken by South Salt Lake Police to a detox facility after they received a report of a man acting confused and scared at a park, KUTV reported.
Officers determined he was intoxicated, took him to the facility and cited him for public intoxication. But the facility is not a detention centre and patients can leave at their will, KUTV reported.
In the videos, he's not heard speaking during his struggles with the officers, except for maybe a couple of words that are unclear.
A minute later, a third officer arrives. The video shows Brandon grabbing on to his holster and gun. They finally manage to cuff Brandon's hands behind his back as he lies on the gravel belly down.
"We want to help you," an officer says. "You've got to stop fighting with us."
After a few seconds, Brandon stops moving. An officer taps Brandon on the shoulder with his gloved hand and asks "Can you hear me?" three times. Brandon does not respond.
"Get him in recovery," an officer commands and the others roll Brandon onto his side.
"Come on man," an officer says. All the camera footage released by the police goes dark at that point.
Salt Lake City Police said in a press release that officers began to perform medical aid. A minute later, they administered the first of multiple doses of Narcan and started performing chest compressions.
"SLCPD is notified that Brandon died. The exact time of death is unknown," the news release said.
The police department said a thorough investigation was being conducted by an outside agency and that the department's own internal affairs unit would conduct a separate investigation.
Rae Duckworth, the operating chairperson for Black Lives Matter's Utah chapters, wants to know why the released footage doesn't show the officers trying to help Brandon.
"We don't even have proof they actually administered aid. We don't have proof that they actually administered Narcan," Duckworth said.
Weisberg, the police spokesperson, said footage of the resuscitation efforts was not released out of consideration for Brandon's family.