Customs and Border Protection employee Robert Rhodes, who was cleared of wrongdoing and reinstated, said he jumped at the chance to testify in the lawsuit filed by Zhao Yan, even though the US government's prosecution of him left him bankrupt.
"I wanted the truth out," Rhodes told The Associated Press during an interview in his attorney's office, while Zhao's claim was being heard by a federal court.
At the time, prosecutors said the 17-year veteran officer used excessive force when he used pepper-spray on Zhao, put his knee on her back and pressed her head into the pavement.
She and two other women had run from the inspection station instead of obeying officers' orders to come inside after they detained a drug suspect they thought may have been with them.
US authorities still maintain that Rhodes "did strike and hit Zhao with his knee and forcibly drive her head into contact with the pavement, resulting in bodily injury" to the 38-year-old woman, according to court documents.
"In this action, the question of whether Zhao bears responsibility for the confrontation with Rhodes is a critical issue," Assistant US Attorney Mary Roach wrote in a court filing.
US Attorney William Hochul, who did not head the office when Rhodes was charged, declined to comment, a spokeswoman said, because the trial is ongoing.
The case immediately provoked anger in China after pictures of the businesswoman, her face swollen from pepper spray and her eyes and forehead bruised, were widely published.
Rhodes and his attorney, Steven Cohen, have long believed the US was pressured by China to prosecute and that Rhodes was an easy target because he was openly gay and had complained about discrimination on the job.
