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Jacksonville deputies are under scrutiny after videos of violent confrontations with fans at the Florida-Georgia football game went viral

The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office has launched an administrative review following videos circulating online showing violent interactions between officers and fans at this weekend's University of Florida-University of Georgia rivalry football game.

Both schools played Saturday at Everbank Stadium in Jacksonville, where at least two altercations with fans and law enforcement led to officers using their stun guns.

A video went viral after it was posted by Tate Moore, a Barstool Sports employee, showing two game spectators appearing to be repeatedly punched by officials.

In Moore's video, one fan is a man with gray hair and a Florida Gators jersey who is held hunched over while a deputy repeatedly lowers his arm across his upper back. Another angle of the same incident shows the man being hit on his neck.

The second video, posted on X by a man named John Phillips, also appears to show the deputy pointing a stun gun at the man in the Gators shirt.

In the same incident, someone on the ground in the stadium's hallway was repeatedly punched by a deputy while a woman in a blue dress repeatedly yelled “no.”

In Moore's video, someone can be heard screaming, “Why are you hitting him?” but it's unclear who is being referred to.

Phillips also posted a completely different incident from the game, in which a man seated next to a woman in a Georgia Bulldogs jersey speaks to a deputy. As they speak, the camera pans to a deputy who appears to be holding a stun gun a few feet away.

The deputy, who appears to be holding his stun gun, walks over and places a hand on the man's arm, which the man punches away without making any further movement. Then it sounds like the stun gun has been used and the man pulls the cords from the gun and stands up, screaming.

The situation quickly escalates when the man begins screaming at both officers and appears to be hit by two different stun guns, which pull on the cords until he falls over the seats below him.

One of the officers then grabs him and a physical altercation ensues, with the officer punching the man and the man pushing him away. It appears the man's shirt was torn in the incident.

It is unclear what led to the violent confrontations in the videos. The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office sent a statement to NBC News in response to a request for comment saying the Professional Standards Division was aware of the videos.

“Administrative reviews of the incidents are underway,” the statement said. “Therefore, the agency will not comment until all facts are known and reviews are completed.”

The same statement was posted on the sheriff's office's social media accounts Saturday evening.

Jacksonville Mayor Donna Deegan wrote in a post on X that the city is awaiting the results of the investigation.

“I have several disturbing videos circulating from yesterday’s game,” Deegan said. “I have spoken to Sheriff Waters and the incidents are under investigation.”

The city just announced Friday that it has agreed to a deal to continue hosting the Florida-Georgia rivalry game from 2028 to 2031 after Everbank is renovated.

According to the press release, the 2026 and 2027 games will be played in Atlanta and Tampa while the stadium is under construction. Deegan called the agreement the result of “many months of close collaboration” with the schools.

“We are grateful that this match will continue to bring our communities together to celebrate college football and create economic impact,” Deegan said Friday.

NBC News has reached out to the athletic directors at the University of Florida and the University of Georgia for comment on the dispute. Neither school immediately responded Sunday.