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Maisha Allums, left, daughter of Marlene Pinnock, the woman punched by a California Highway patrolman, stands with her attorney Caree Harper before a news conference outside court in Los Angeles Thursday, July 17, 2014. A civil rights lawsuit was filed Thursday in federal court on behalf of Pinnock, a homeless woman seen in a video being pummeled by a California Highway Patrol officer alongside a Los Angeles freeway.

LOS ANGELES (AP) โ€” A woman seen in a video being pummeled by a California Highway Patrol (CHP) officer alongside a Los Angeles freeway filed a civil rights lawsuit Thursday.

The lawsuit that attorney Caree Harper filed in federal court on behalf of Marlene Pinnock names the commissioner of the CHP, the unidentified officer in the July 1 video and other officers as defendants.

The now-viral video recorded by a passing driver shows Pinnock, 51, being repeatedly punched as sheโ€™s straddled by the officer.

The lawsuit claims excessive force, assault, battery and a violation of Pinnockโ€™s due process rights. It states that Pinnock โ€œsuffered great mental and physical pain, suffering, anguish, fright, nervousness, anxiety, grief shock, humiliation, indignity, and embarrassmentโ€ and seeks monetary damages to be determined at trial.

CHP Commissioner Joe Farrow told The Associated Press that he had not yet seen the lawsuit and the agency doesnโ€™t comment on pending litigation. He has met with community and civil rights leaders in Los Angeles multiple times since the incident and has pledged that the agencyโ€™s internal investigation will conclude in weeks rather than the usual months.

โ€œWe do have a good history at taking a look at our processes, procedures and conduct of our employees,โ€ Farrow said. โ€œThatโ€™s never been questioned until today.โ€

The CHP has said Pinnock was walking on Interstate 10 west of downtown Los Angeles, endangering herself and motorists, and the officer was trying to restrain her. Pinnock had begun walking off the freeway but returned when the confrontation occurred.

Harper said Pinnock remains hospitalized with head injuries. The CHP hasnโ€™t released the identity of the officer, who had been on the job for 1 1/2 years; heโ€™s on desk duty pending completion of the internal investigation.

Nine drivers called 911 to report Pinnock before the beating, according to recordings the CHP released Thursday in response to a public records request by The Associated Press. The callers worriedly told operators the woman was barefoot on the shoulder or attempting to cross lanes of traffic.

One caller said she appeared high or drunk. Another said she appeared โ€œloaded.โ€

Earlier this week, CHP investigators seized Pinnockโ€™s medical records and the clothing she was wearing during the incident. She claims in the lawsuit that the CHPโ€™s actions were an effort to shift blame to Pinnock by โ€œmisusing the criminal justice system to obtain privileged and private information to discredit (Pinnock) โ€ฆ or circumvent the discovery rules in civil rights violation matters.โ€

Farrow couldnโ€™t confirm the search warrant Wednesday but told the AP: โ€œI donโ€™t think the CHP is trying to put her on trial or make it an issue about her. What Iโ€™m looking at is entirely about the circumstances, we all saw what happened. Our job is to find out the why and the how.โ€

The incident has drawn outrage from U.S. Rep. Maxine Waters, who called it police brutality and demanded the officer be fired, and civil rights groups including the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California.

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Tami Abdollah can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/latams