New video gives a better idea of the crowd outside an Orlando beauty store where police had to use pepper spray to break up the crowd.

The Beauty Exchange on North Pine Hills Road was having a special sale on weaves and hair extensions back on Oct. 10.

Customers said they were going to buy weaves and hair extensions for as low as one cent.

But Orlando police officers quickly responded to the scene, after they were called to the Beauty Exchange on North Pine Hills Road by frantic customers on October 10.

Dispatcher: “Does anyone have any weapons?”

Caller: “I don’t know. I ain’t going up in that crowd.”

Dispatcher: Okay. Why are they surrounding the security guard? What happened?”

Caller: “Because they getting ready to open the store and it’s a big sale going on and everybody wanna get in.”

“Let’s go. Back it up,” an officer is heard yelling on body camera video provided to News 13.

“Sarge, just a heads up we’re not getting any cooperation out here, we may have to go to spraying the crowd,” the officer continued.

Meanwhile, the body camera video reveals once a few customers were let inside the story to buy one cent weaves and hair extensions, things got out of hand and the crowd was pepper sprayed.

Police said no one was hurt and officers fired the pepper spray up in the air, and not at eye level. Some customers said police went too far.

While coughing presumably from the pepper spray, the officer wearing the body camera asked another officer, “how’d that happen?”

“Stupid manager, started letting people in,” replied the other officer.  “I just read him the riot act… (and told him) well you just caused people to get sprayed out there. Good job.”

“Sarge told us specifically to hold off on the spray,” responded the officer wearing the body camera.

Orlando police body cam video was released exclusively to News 13. We see from the police's point of view how loud and big the crowd was.

Customers said they were not unruly or out of control while waiting for The Beauty Exchange to open. Some people arrived at 2 a.m. for the sale.

However, customers saw the incident from a different point of view when they called 911.

Caller: “There was like a lady in the front of the line, it was a couple of people, they all had kids, like little kids about under one year old and the police like literally pepper sprayed one of the children in the eye, like the pepper spray was all over the little kids face.”

And at least one officer agreed that no one needed to be pepper sprayed.

“We’re doing fine until they started letting them in. But still there, all we had to do was (inaudible). There was no need to spray,” commented an unidentified OPD officer.

The Orlando Police Department is conducting an internal review of how they handled this incident.