Black Man (Elijah McClain) Murdered By Choke Hold In Colorado By Police

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Devils.

I brought myself to watch footage of the initial contact and you can hear them giving verbal cues to each other that they're on camera. Next thing you hear is "he's going for your gun, dude".

AURORA, Colo. (AP) — Multiple police officers in suburban Denver have been placed on paid leave during an investigation into photos that emerged of them near where Elijah McClain died last summer after three white officers stopped the Black man as he walked down the street and one put him into a chokehold.

Meanwhile, federal authorities announced Tuesday that they have been reviewing McClain's death to see if a civil rights investigation is warranted and will also look at whether one is needed in the case of the photos.

In a joint statement, the Colorado U.S. Attorney's Office, the U.S. Justice Department's Civil Rights Division and the FBI said the review began last year and was ongoing. The Justice Department usually does not comment on investigations until they are complete, but the announcement noted that “there are specific cases in which doing so is warranted if such information is in the best interest of the public and public safety."

The interim police chief of the city of Aurora, Vanessa Wilson, announced the internal police investigation into the photos Monday night. In a statement, she said the suspended officers were “depicted in photographs near the site where Elijah McClain died.” She did not provide more details about what the images show or how many officers were on leave.

The two photos were taken near where police stopped the 23-year-old on Aug. 24, 2019, as they responded to a report of a suspicious person walking down the street wearing a face mask, said Officer Matthew Longshore, an Aurora police spokesman. The pictures were not taken during the fatal run-in, Longshore said.

McClain’s death generated new attention after the death of George Floyd stirred worldwide protests over racial injustice and police brutality. Floyd died on May 25 after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee into the handcuffed Black man's neck for nearly eight minutes.

In McClain's case, police body-camera video shows an Aurora officer getting out of his car, approaching McClain and saying, “Stop right there. Stop. Stop. ... I have a right to stop you because you’re being suspicious.”

In the video, the officer turns McClain around and repeats, “Stop tensing up.” As McClain tries to escape the officer’s grip, the officer says, “Relax, or I’m going to have to change this situation.”

As other officers join to restrain McClain, he begs them to let go and says, “You guys started to arrest me, and I was stopping my music to listen.”

Aurora police have said McClain refused to stop walking and fought back when officers tried to take him into custody. The officers used a chokehold that cuts off blood to the brain — a tactic recently banned in several places following Floyd’s death.

In the video, McClain tells officers: “Let go of me. I am an introvert. Please respect the boundaries that I am speaking.”

Paramedics administered 500 milligrams of a sedative to calm him down, police have said. He was on the ground for 15 minutes as several officers and paramedics stood by. McClain, a massage therapist and self-taught violinist, suffered cardiac arrest and was later declared brain dead and taken off life support.

A forensic pathologist could not determine what exactly led to his death but said physical exertion during the confrontation likely contributed.

An officer reported the photos to the department's internal affairs division Thursday. Wilson said she learned of the investigation that day and ordered investigators to make it their top priority.

The investigation was completed Monday and the results, including the photos, will be made public after police officials give a review and Wilson makes a decision on how to respond, Longshore said. The chief's decision could be appealed by the officers under investigation, which would delay the results being released, he said.

McClain's family said the photos were a “new low” for the department.


“This is a department where officers tackled an innocent young black man for no reason, inflicted outrageous force — including two carotid chokeholds — for fifteen minutes as he pled for his life, joked when he vomited, and threatened to sic a dog on him for not lying still enough as he was dying,” the family said in a statement.

The three officers who stopped McClain did not face any criminal charges after an investigation by the district attorney, but Democratic Gov. Jared Polis directed Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser last week to reopen the investigation and possibly prosecute them.

Police have been criticized for wearing riot gear and using pepper spray against some people at a protest Saturday over McClain's death, which included a violin vigil, but have denied allegations of using tear gas. Wilson defended her officers' response to what she described as a group of agitators at an otherwise peaceful protest.

“Who didn't do it the right way were those agitators who were arming themselves, that were putting on helmets and gas masks and throwing rocks at my officers,” Wilson told KUSA-TV.
 

Knicksman20

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Elijah McClain's father calls for everyone involved in his death to be "held accountable for their actions"

The Justice Department announced late Tuesday night they would be looking into the death of Black Aurora, Colorado resident Elijah McClain to determine if a federal civil rights investigation is needed. The 23-year-old's father, LaWayne Mosley, called for all involved to be "held accountable for their actions."

"He's just a bundle of joy. I mean, just my baby. My baby boy," he told CBS News' Jamie Yuccas.

McClain's August 2019 death at the hands of police and the lack of consequences for those involved recently sparked a national outcry following protests over the death of George Floyd who, like McClain, told police "I can't breathe."

McClain had been walking home from a convenience store when he was approached by police after a 911 caller reported a suspicious person in a ski mask. Though the person told 911 they did not believe McClain was a threat, officers detained him — even when McClain himself told them he was unarmed.

Police claimed McClain tried to reach for an officer's gun, but it was not shown on the police body camera.

They placed him in a chokehold as he pleaded with them, "I'm just different, that's all… I don't have a gun, I don't do that stuff." Police called paramedics who then administered ketamine, an anesthetic used, according to Director of Denver's Emergency Medical Response System Dr. Kevin McVaney, in "severe, severe agitated people."

"I don't understand it, I just don't understand it," McClain's father said.


Police reports state that McClain was given 500 milligrams of ketamine because paramedics estimated his weight at 220 pounds.

In reality, McClain weighed 140 pounds
. He later went into cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead at the hospital days later.

Criminal defense attorney Randy Zelin is not associated with the case, but said there are too many variables to give paramedics the power to use an anesthetic like ketamine.

"You don't have the opportunity to understand and to spend the time to determine the right dosage," he explained.

Interim Aurora Police Chief Vanessa Wilson told CBS News her department will cooperate fully with the federal investigation. She is also looking into three officers who allegedly reenacted what happened to McClain and took pictures of it, but said she will give the officers a chance to respond before releasing her findings.

Meanwhile, LaWayne Mosley said he misses his son every day. His attorney, Mari Newman, noted how many police tactics have deadly consequences.

"In the most obvious cases, officers shoot Black people. But likewise, tasers can be lethal. Chokeholds can be lethal. Ketamine can be lethal," Newman said.

Mosley said his son loved animals and playing the violin. Asked what he misses most about McClain, Mosley said "him not being here, period."

The state of Colorado has also opened an independent investigation into the officers who arrested McClain. They are still employed by the Aurora Police Department.

What I bolded is some nonsense. The coroner lying & working to get those racists off
 
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Tha_Mac

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Elijah McClain's father calls for everyone involved in his death to be "held accountable for their actions"

The Justice Department announced late Tuesday night they would be looking into the death of Black Aurora, Colorado resident Elijah McClain to determine if a federal civil rights investigation is needed. The 23-year-old's father, LaWayne Mosley, called for all involved to be "held accountable for their actions."

"He's just a bundle of joy. I mean, just my baby. My baby boy," he told CBS News' Jamie Yuccas.

McClain's August 2019 death at the hands of police and the lack of consequences for those involved recently sparked a national outcry following protests over the death of George Floyd who, like McClain, told police "I can't breathe."

McClain had been walking home from a convenience store when he was approached by police after a 911 caller reported a suspicious person in a ski mask. Though the person told 911 they did not believe McClain was a threat, officers detained him — even when McClain himself told them he was unarmed.

Police claimed McClain tried to reach for an officer's gun, but it was not shown on the police body camera.

They placed him in a chokehold as he pleaded with them, "I'm just different, that's all… I don't have a gun, I don't do that stuff." Police called paramedics who then administered ketamine, an anesthetic used, according to Director of Denver's Emergency Medical Response System Dr. Kevin McVaney, in "severe, severe agitated people."

"I don't understand it, I just don't understand it," McClain's father said.


Police reports state that McClain was given 500 milligrams of ketamine because paramedics estimated his weight at 220 pounds.

In reality, McClain weighed 140 pounds
. He later went into cardiac arrest and was pronounced dead at the hospital days later.

Criminal defense attorney Randy Zelin is not associated with the case, but said there are too many variables to give paramedics the power to use an anesthetic like ketamine.

"You don't have the opportunity to understand and to spend the time to determine the right dosage," he explained.

Interim Aurora Police Chief Vanessa Wilson told CBS News her department will cooperate fully with the federal investigation. She is also looking into three officers who allegedly reenacted what happened to McClain and took pictures of it, but said she will give the officers a chance to respond before releasing her findings.

Meanwhile, LaWayne Mosley said he misses his son every day. His attorney, Mari Newman, noted how many police tactics have deadly consequences.

"In the most obvious cases, officers shoot Black people. But likewise, tasers can be lethal. Chokeholds can be lethal. Ketamine can be lethal," Newman said.

Mosley said his son loved animals and playing the violin. Asked what he misses most about McClain, Mosley said "him not being here, period."

The state of Colorado has also opened an independent investigation into the officers who arrested McClain. They are still employed by the Aurora Police Department.

What I bolded is some nonsense. The coroner lying & working to get those racists off

This is bullshyt. They shouldn't have injected him with anything. He was already handcuffed and restrained. And I said it earlier in this thread I think whoever injected Elijah is the one who really should be under fire. He could have been allergic to ketamine or had a bad response to it which set off the cardiac arrest. Somebody gotta come out of this facing charges, the loss of jobs is obvious.
 

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Aurora cop being investigated for Elijah McClain photos resigns

Aurora cop under investigation for posing for photos at Elijah McClain site resigns

elijah-mcclain-2.jpg


An Aurora police officer under investigation for posing for photos at the site where Elijah McClain was violently arrested last year has tendered his resignation, the department announced in a tweet Thursday afternoon.

Jaron Jones had been with the department since October 2016, police said.

Aurora police on Monday announced multiple officers had been placed on administrative leave after CBS4 reported that officers posed for photos in which they pretended to use carotid chokeholds on each other near the 1900 block of Billings Street in Aurora, where McClain was stopped on Aug. 24. That same chokehold method was used by police on McClain, 23, before a paramedic injected him with a heavy sedative.

McClain, who was not accused of a crime, died in the hospital several days later.

RELATED: Elijah McClain timeline: What happened that night and what has happened since
His death has become a rallying cry for demonstrators in the wake of the Minneapolis police killing of George Floyd in May, prompting a protest outside Aurora’s police headquarters last week and plans for another on Friday night.

It could take weeks for police to release their investigation, which concluded on Monday, because the department is waiting until the entire disciplinary process is finished before making more information public. Aurora police have not said how many officers are on leave over the photograph incident, or publicly identified the others.

McClain’s death has prompted investigations at every level of government, as authorities scramble to respond to public outcry.

Gov. Jared Polis last week appointed Attorney General Phil Weiser as a special prosecutor to investigate the case, and a coalition of federal authorities revealed this week that since last year they have been looking into whether there are grounds for a federal civil rights investigation.

In addition, Aurora city leaders are appointing a third-party investigator to delve into the officers’ actions last August.




 

Afrodroid

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Aurora cop being investigated for Elijah McClain photos resigns

Aurora cop under investigation for posing for photos at Elijah McClain site resigns


An Aurora police officer under investigation for posing for photos at the site where Elijah McClain was violently arrested last year has tendered his resignation, the department announced in a tweet Thursday afternoon.

Jaron Jones had been with the department since October 2016, police said.

Aurora police on Monday announced multiple officers had been placed on administrative leave after CBS4 reported that officers posed for photos in which they pretended to use carotid chokeholds on each other near the 1900 block of Billings Street in Aurora, where McClain was stopped on Aug. 24. That same chokehold method was used by police on McClain, 23, before a paramedic injected him with a heavy sedative.

fukking pigs making fun of our dead brothers and sisters, they all deserve to have their heads blown up :pacspit:
 

Knicksman20

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Elijah McClain was injected with ketamine while handcuffed. Some medical experts worry about its use during police calls.
Ketamine, a powerful sedative, might be given by paramedics to calm people who appear agitated. But some medical and legal experts question its use during police calls.

As state and federal inquiries widen into the case of Elijah McClain, a young Black man who died last summer after Colorado police placed him in a chokehold, the decision by paramedics to inject him with a powerful sedative while he was handcuffed has raised questions about its use during police calls and whether such medical treatment violates a person's rights.

Fire and emergency medical services officials in the Denver suburb of Aurora have said a preliminary review found that medics' actions on the night police detained McClain, 23, were "consistent and aligned with our established protocols." But some medical and legal experts worry that ketamine — or any form of an anesthetic — raises too many unknowns and that it should not be used to subdue someone in a police action.

"Why anyone would be giving ketamine in that circumstance is beyond me," said neuroscientist Carl Hart, chair of Columbia University's psychology department. "The major problem here is we should never be ordering any medication, and no one should be taking or given it against their will."

McClain's death has drawn new attention amid high-profile fatal encounters involving law enforcement against Black Americans, leading to protests. Colorado Gov. Jared Polis has appointed a special prosecutor to re-evaluate the case.

Just after 10:30 p.m. on Aug. 24, McClain, a massage therapist, was buying iced tea from a corner store, his family said. They said he wore ski masks because he had a blood condition that made him feel cold.

Three Aurora police officers were called to the area on a report of a suspicious person wearing a mask and waving his arms.

Bodycam video showed officers ordering McClain to stop. He responded that he was an introvert and to "please respect the boundaries that I am speaking."

After questioning him, the officers grabbed McClain. Then one of them said he believed McClain had reached for one of their holstered guns, and McClain was brought to the ground. Police said in a statement that he "resisted contact, a struggle ensued, and he was taken into custody."

The officers took McClain to the ground using a carotid control hold, a type of chokehold meant to restrict blood to the brain to render a person unconscious. Aurora police banned carotid control holds last month, and chokeholds have been prohibited by police departments across the country in the wake of the death in May of George Floyd, a Black man pinned by his neck while in Minneapolis police custody.

McClain "briefly went unconscious," according to a report the local district attorney, Dave Young, completed last fall. McClain could also be heard in the police video telling the officers, "I can't breathe, please," and he vomited while he was on the ground.

A medic told officers that "when the ambulance gets here, we're going to go ahead and give him some ketamine."

The officers responded, "Sounds good," and they told the medic that McClain appeared to be "on" something and that he had "incredible strength."

An Aurora Fire Rescue medic injected McClain with 500 milligrams of ketamine, according to the district attorney's report.

The coroner found that McClain's death was due to "undetermined causes," and according to Young's report, the "evidence does not support the prosecution of a homicide." McClain had marijuana in his system along with the ketamine, which the coroner suggested was a "therapeutic level."

But the coroner did not rule out that the chokehold, in addition to the ketamine, might have contributed to his death.

"Although there is no evidence to support ketamine overdose," according to Young's report, the coroner "could not exclude the possibility that Mr. McClain suffered from an unexpected reaction to the drug."

The medic at the scene estimated that McClain weighed 220 pounds, Young's report said. But the coroner said he was 5 feet, 6 inches tall and weighed 140 pounds.

According to documents shared by Aurora Fire Rescue, the standard dose of ketamine is 5 milligrams per each kilogram of a person's weight. That would mean that instead of 500 milligrams of ketamine, McClain should have received about 320 milligrams.

The ketamine was given via syringe into his right shoulder, according to Young's report.

"After approximately two to three minutes, Mr. McClain calmed down," the report said. "He was placed on a gurney, his handcuffs were removed, and he was placed into soft restraints ... and loaded into the ambulance."

About seven minutes after he received the ketamine, McClain had no pulse in the ambulance and went into cardiac arrest, the report said. Medics were able to revive him, but he was later declared brain dead, and he was taken off life support less than a week later.

Young declined to press charges.

"Under the circumstances of this investigation, it is improbable for the prosecution to prove cause of death beyond a reasonable doubt to a jury," Young wrote in a letter to Aurora's police chief.

Mari Newman, an attorney for McClain's family, said that the ketamine was unnecessary and that she wants a thorough investigation.

"The Aurora medics had no right to inject Elijah with ketamine at all," she said. "He was handcuffed, crushed against the ground by officers much larger then he was, and he was not fighting. He was begging for his life, vomiting and trying to breathe. And they certainly had no right to involuntary inject him with a dose intended for someone over twice his size."

What does ketamine do?
Ketamine, if administered properly, can be safe, said Jason Varin, an assistant professor at the University of Minnesota College of Pharmacy.

In lower doses, it can be used to treat acute pain, Varin said, while at higher doses, it becomes a dissociative anesthetic, which means that not only does it help physically, but that a person's reality — feelings, thoughts and understanding of what is occurring — is also "disconnected" and he or she may have limited memory of what is happening.

Ketamine is known as the street drug "Special K" because of how it induces a trancelike state, which is often referred to as a "K-hole." Variations of ketamine have been approved by the Food and Drug Administration to treat depression.

"It is, like many drugs, quite mysterious as to how it works in some cases," Varin said.

Ketamine may be dangerous to people who suffer liver failure, he added, and it can affect blood pressure, cause rapid heart rate or an irregular heartbeat, prompt seizures or muscle twitching, and induce extreme anxiety or hallucinations as a person comes out of it.

Ketamine is most commonly used by veterinarians on animals and as an anesthetic in some surgical procedures on people. During police-related calls, however, medics may not have the full scope of a person's medical history to anticipate how they will react to it.

"Since it is highly unlikely they can tell the state of health of the individual or if they have non-prescribed drugs, alcohol or prescription medications ... these combination of risks could cause any number of problems, including respiratory depression and cardiac arrest," Varin said.

Aurora Fire Rescue did not respond to requests for comment about paramedics' use of ketamine. The department began using the medication in January 2019 and had administered it seven times, KDVR-TV of Denver reported in October.

In Colorado, EMS providers are permitted to use ketamine for pain management and to treat a syndrome known as "excited delirium," but they must first obtain a waiver from the state health department.

It is not uncommon for medics to use ketamine outside hospital settings to treat patients who appear agitated and may harm themselves or others, according to the state.

Statewide, 427 people were given ketamine for agitation from August 2017 to July 2018, and about 20 percent of patients had to be intubated at a hospital, The Denver Post reported.

In the same month McClain was provided ketamine, a 25-year-old man in another Denver suburb was given a 750-milligram, two-dose injection of the drug during a police encounter, KDVR reported. The state health department said last week that it is investigating the case.

Aurora police spokeswoman Faith Goodrich said officers are not involved in ordering or administering ketamine, which is left to the discretion of a medic.

Hart, the neuroscientist, said that given the amount of ketamine McClain is known to have received, "I am certain that he thought he was losing his mind."
 

Knicksman20

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Continued:

Ketamine use for excited delirium
McClain's "sudden collapse after an intense struggle" with police is referred to in the coroner's report as an example of excited delirium.

The medic who authorized the use of ketamine had told investigators that he could not gather information from McClain about his medical history because he was acting combative and "appeared to be" exhibiting signs of the syndrome, which may be triggered by drug use or stimulants and is broadly considered to be a state of agitation or aggression.

State health department guidelines note that the use of ketamine for excited delirium "is an emerging treatment" and that "across the country, many physicians question the existence of an excited delirium syndrome."

While it can be controversial to diagnose someone with excited delirium, because many medical professional associations do not recognize it, Dr. Deborah Mash, a professor of neurology at the University of Miami, told NPR that the phenomenon is "definitely real."

"And while we don't know precisely what causes this, we do know it is the result of a neural chemical imbalance in the brain," she said.

Excited delirium has been mentioned in connection with dozens of cases of excessive force and police-involved deaths, including cases in which police eventually used stun guns to shock people into submission, according to Amnesty International.

One of the four Minneapolis officers charged in the death of Floyd had said, "I am worried about excited delirium or whatever," according to the charging document.

Ketamine has also been linked to other excited delirium cases. In 2018, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported that Minneapolis police officers asked medical responders to use ketamine on people — at times over the objection of those being drugged and, in some cases, when no crime appeared to have occurred — more than 60 times in 2017, up from three in 2012.

Hospital officials had argued that ketamine helped manage people with excited delirium. The uptick, however, led Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo to prohibit officers from recommending medical treatment to EMTs.

Kenneth Udoibok, a Minneapolis lawyer who specializes in civil rights and police misconduct cases, filed a federal lawsuit in 2017 on behalf of a man who said police mistook him for a suicidal man in the parking lot of a hospital. The man was handcuffed and then eventually injected with ketamine by a paramedic against his will, according to the lawsuit. Officials described the man as exhibiting "erratic" behavior, but he said he was agitated because police detained him on the ground in the rain for an hour.

The lawsuit's case against the police was dismissed before trial, and the case against the hospital was resolved out of court.

Udoibok said sedation lawsuits are hard to win, because without video recording, it is difficult to prove that an officer coerced a paramedic to sedate a person.

"It's a complete violation of an individual's rights," Udoibok said. "And it's the perfect crime. You can never prosecute it."

Carl Takei, a senior staff attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union who focuses on police practices, said ascribing a person's actions to excited delirium can create a shield for officers who use excessive force.

Then to "stick a needle into somebody" who is considered physically threatening only makes an already fraught situation involving police that much more dangerous, Takei said.

"Any time that an EMT is administering a medication against a person's will, that raises medical ethics issues, as well, that are not resolved simply because a police officer wanted them to do it," he said. "That goes into the underlying question: Was this invasion of a person's body justified?

Elijah McClain's death puts focus on ketamine injections during police calls
 

EA

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How are the police allowed to inject anyone with anything? :mindblown:

There’s a reason why you have a consultation with a doctor before any surgery that requires anaesthetics because they wanna make sure they’re giving you the correct dosage and they’re not giving a substance that you’re allergic to. The fact this is procedurally allowed shows how broken the police system is.

Also, notice how they mention weed was in his system even though it’s completely legal in Denver. Still preying on those good old sensibilities :mjpls:

Full version:



This made my blood boil :snoop:
 
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