American student detained in China after dispute with cabbie

This undated photo provided by Jennifer McLean shows her son, University of Montana student Guthrie McLean, on the Great Wall of China. Guthrie was arrested Sunday, July 16, 2017, after a June 10 altercation with a taxi driver in the city of Zhengzhou, China, and accused of intentionally injuring the taxi driver. A family friend, Tom Mitchell, says Mclean was trying to protect his mother after the driver attempted to rough her up following a fare dispute. (Jennifer McLean via AP)
This undated photo provided by Jennifer McLean shows her son, University of Montana student Guthrie McLean, on the Great Wall of China. Guthrie was arrested Sunday, July 16, 2017, after a June 10 altercation with a taxi driver in the city of Zhengzhou, China, and accused of intentionally injuring the taxi driver. A family friend, Tom Mitchell, says Mclean was trying to protect his mother after the driver attempted to rough her up following a fare dispute. (Jennifer McLean via AP)

BEIJING (AP) - Police in central China have arrested an American college student on charges of intentional injury following an altercation with a taxi driver, according to the student's mother and a family friend.

Guthrie McLean was formally arrested in the city of Zhengzhou earlier this week, said Tom Mitchell, Beijing bureau chief for the Financial Times who has known the University of Montana student since 2001.

McLean was trying to protect his mother from a local taxi driver in a dispute that took place June 10, Mitchell said.

McLean's mother, Jennifer McLean, said in an email to the Associated Press that she has not seen or directly communicated with her son since his arrest but was able to pass messages to him Thursday through the U.S. consulate.

"He is enduring," Jennifer McLean said.

A U.S. official contacted McLean in detention Thursday and he reported no physical or mental health concerns related to his detention, according to Marnee Banks, a spokeswoman for U.S. Sen. Jon Tester.

Tester had urged the State Department to intervene in the case.

The Zhengzhou municipal public security bureau, when contacted by the Associated Press, said it does not take inquiries about individual cases. The U.S. Embassy in Beijing referred questions to spokesmen in Washington.

McLean's mother has been teaching in Zhengzhou, where Guthrie visited her this summer.

The altercation occurred after a cab driver refused to give her about $5 in change upon returning to her residence, Mitchell said. After the driver "started to rough up Jennifer," Guthrie came out and pushed the man to the ground, he said.

Police arrived at the residence Sunday, took Guthrie away and demanded he pay $14,800 in compensation for injuries sustained by the driver, Mitchell and Jennifer McLean said. The price has since dropped to $8,900, he said.