This youtube vid is the unedited bodycam of the second officer, no cuts or interruptions.
At 13:47 of the video, Officer Grayson points to the other officer and tells him to "check on her... stove" which was a gas burner at full flame, and that is when the rest of it happens.
Before that, she was avoiding giving identification (she couldn't remember her name? really!?) and didn't know anything about anything. There is a problem with that, not enough to justify the use of coercive physical force, but they should have escalated to a lower level of coercion by giving her context on what her actions were and what they observed. Like, "you called us here because of a disturbance outside and we feel you are avoiding giving us all the information, so what is really going on here?" or "did you call us to scare off someone who was here earlier?"
Again, where and how does that justify escalating to *any* use of force? This is the thing that happens again and again that makes no sense, where cops respond to a call and start harassing the caller if there's not an obvious threat in the area. If they go to a call, there's nothing there to respond to, the person who made the call isn't in distress... why do they keep hanging around pestering the caller for their life story.
I've seen this play out IRL. Someone stole a teenager's wallet while he was hanging out with his friends in a public space. I helped him look for it, it eventually turned up in a trash can about $200 lighter, the usual grab-and-dump that happens with purses and wallets left unattended. Kid didn't have any idea what to do and was freaking because... y'know, sixteen or whatever, that's a shitload of money to have stolen. Cops get called a few minutes later and they show up six deep. Instead of explaining the (limited) options, which basically amounted to "call a parent over so they can file a police report", they harassed the kid and his friends until they got frustrated and left the area. The whole interaction was deeply uncomfortable to watch because the cops kept circling the kid into corners and talking aggressively, like they were trying to provoke a response. No points for guessing the skin colors of the kids and cops.
Another time I called 911 to get an EMS response for a transient guy who was unresponsive lying on the ground in 105 degree heat. I managed to wake him up and get him into the shade with some water. Cops show up first, four deep, loom over him, and the first thing they say is, "ODing again, huh [name]?" Poor guy was on the verge of tears by the time EMS arrived.
It's this pointlessly hostile shithead need to turn every encounter into a fight that some of them seem to have that I genuinely do not understand.