Now in an exclusive interview, the star witness against former Clayton County Sheriff Victor Hill is speaking out after working for Clayton County. She tells our Caitlin Ross what she saw was just not right. That's why she claimed she decided to record the sheriff on video. Speaking up came at a cost for this police officer, she told me. An hour after she testified at the grand jury against former Sheriff Victor Hill, she was demoted and removed from all of her special team assignments. She struggled to find work in the field after she left the department, but still says she has no regrets. 50 years old, this officer secretly hit record on her cell phone when former Clayton County Sheriff Victor Hill came down to the jail to confront a prisoner because she says she knew what would happen next. Everybody was scared. So many people were scared. A lot of people were saying, look, I'm not going to testify. And so, like, well, somebody's got to stand up. She wants to keep her identity secret because she testified against Victor Hilit trial, but says the public deserves to see what he did to people at the jail. Entitled to a fair and speedy trial. Rolex Year round, rolling chair round. You stay out of Clayton County understanding. Yes, Sir. You sound like it's upsetting. It's, it's really degrading. It's everything that we should be against. The use of a restraint chair is allowed at the Clayton County Jail for a limited time if the prisoner is a threat to themselves or others, she says. This video proves that wasn't the case. He wasn't combative, he wasn't fighting. He was respectable. Jack. You entitled to sit in this chair and you're entitled to get the hell out of my county and don't come back. That's what you're entitled to. We live in a world where seeing is believing, hearing is believing. At trial, the former sheriff pled not guilty and his attorneys argued he didn't order the restraint chairs use. The jury saw the video and decided otherwise. I sit there and see if you can get some damn sense in your head. He did eventually find a department that saw value in her standing up for what was right. She sense moved up at that agency, she says of the guilty verdict. She thinks the jury got it right.