Miami, FL - A police SWAT team commander in Florida has been placed on leave without pay after one of his officers wounded an unarmed black man seen on cellphone video with his hands in the air, North Miami’s city manager said on Friday.

Commander Emile Hollant made conflicting statements about the incident, which is now under investigation, City Manager Larry Spring said during a news conference.

The officer who fired the shots, identified by Spring as Jonathan Aledda, is on leave with pay.

“This will not be tolerated,” Spring said of Aledda’s actions.

Behavioral therapist Charles Kinsey was shot in the leg on Monday as he tried to get an autistic man back to a nearby group home from which he had wandered. Video that shows Kinsey prone on the ground with his hands held high before the shooting sparked fresh calls for U.S. police to review their use-of-force policies. [nL1N1A71EU]

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement is investigating the case along with the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office. No charges have been filed.

The officers who encountered Kinsey and his patient on Monday were responding to an emergency call about an armed man threatening suicide, police said in a statement.

The shooting was not recorded on a video provided to Reuters by Kinsey’s lawyer. But in the footage, which has circulated widely on social media, Kinsey can be heard trying to calm both his patient and the officers.

“All he has is a toy truck in his hands,” Kinsey yelled in the video, referring to his patient. No gun was recovered at the scene, the city’s police chief said on Thursday.

In the past month, deadly shootings of black men in Louisiana and Minnesota were followed by eight police officers being targeted and killed in Dallas and Baton Rouge. Demonstrators across the United States have protested the use of excessive force by police, particularly against black men.

North Miami officials vowed on Friday the investigation of the latest incident would be thorough.

“It will be done with transparency and there will not be any cover-ups,” said City Councilman Scott Galvin.