What the video shows does not appear to match the story the officers initially told when the incident happened in January.
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RELATED: Officers removed from Chicago school after stun gun used on student
Video from security cameras inside Marshall High School in the city's East Garfield Park neighborhood shows Dnigma Howard talking with a classmate while two Chicago police officers stand by.
As the person in the yellow shirt walks away, video shows one of the officers immediately grab Howard and throw her to the ground.
The three of them eventually disappear from the shot, going down the staircase. The video shows other students immediately rush toward the stairs.
RELATED: Charges dropped against student removed from Marshall HS by CPD officers
Video from another angle shows the officers dragging Howard down the stairs, and at the bottom one officer is holding her arm while the other is holding her leg.
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"In the video you can see they pull her by the leg down the stairs, the whole flight of stairs," said Laurentio Howard, father.
One officer appears to kick and punch Howard as he's holding her on the ground. Video shows her thrashing on the floor, appearing to fight back before the officer ultimately deploys his stun gun.
"I thought maybe they were going to try to choke her out or she would lose consciousness or something like that. they had their foot on her chest. She has asthma, she's telling me she can't breathe. She's turning red, I see a vein sticking out her head," Laurentio said.
At the time of the incident, police said they were told to escort Howard out of the school after she was removed from class for having her phone out, then got agitated and lashed out at a security guard. Howard previously said she grabbed one of the officer's vests.
Laurentio had been called to pick his daughter up after she was removed from the classroom, he said.
"I'm standing downstairs by the front door and she said, 'I'm going to get her to come downstairs. She's going home right now,'" he said.
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"I couldn't believe I seen two sworn police officers of Chicago abusing my daughter like this and I'm standing right there watching them do this and can't do anything about it," he recalled of the incident.
Officers tased Howard three times.
"Thank god for that video," said the family's attorney. "When this instance first happened the state's attorney charged a 16-year-old unarmed girl with two felonies for aggravated assault against a peace officer."
Howard was initially charged with two felony counts of aggravated battery against a peace officer, but the State's Attorney's office dropped the charges. The two officers were removed from the school and reassigned to different duties as COPA and the CPD Force Review Unit completed an independent investigation of the incident.
The City of Chicago Law Department said they "do not comment on pending litigation."