Elijah McClain: Death of unarmed 23-year-old black man after police chokehold now focus of investigation

The 2019 death of Elijah McClain in police custody will be reviewed via a special investigation, in an announcement made precisely one month since George Floyd was killed.

Probe reopened into death of unarmed black man in US state of colorado

Elijah McClain, 23, died in police custody in August 2019, three days after being placed in a chokehold by Colorado officers and injected with ketamine. Source: Supplied

The governor of the US state of Colorado has ordered a special investigation into the death of a young black man put in a police chokehold, as a celebrity-backed online petition calling for justice in the case passed three million signatures.

The death in the western United States occurred months before the 25 May killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, but nationwide anger sparked by Mr Floyd's case has refocused attention on police brutality against minorities - particularly African Americans.

Elijah McClain, 23, died last August in Aurora, near Denver, three days after he was put in a chokehold by Colorado police, injected with ketamine to sedate him and suffered cardiac arrest.
Probe reopened into death of unarmed black man in US state of colorado
Elijah McClain's family have described his arresting officers as "bullies with badges", with a "special investigation" now ordered into his death. (Supplied) Source: Supplied
Police had responded to a call about a "suspicious" black male "acting weird" in the street and wearing a ski mask, the district attorney's report had said. One officer said Mr McClain, who was unarmed, had reached for another officer's gun. 

Governor Jared Polis appointed Colorado's attorney-general to probe the case, vowing on Twitter that "if the facts support prosecution," the state will "criminally prosecute any individuals whose actions caused the death of Elijah McClain."

In a statement, Mr Polis said he had been "moved" after speaking with the victim's mother Sheneen.

“Bullies with badges”

Mr McClain's family told media he had been out buying iced tea, and often wore the mask to stay warm because he suffered from anaemia.

"They murdered him. They are bullies with badges," Sheneen McClain told American news outlet CBS.

No charges have been filed against the officers, who remain on duty.

Dave Young, the prosecutor who found no criminal wrongdoing, said in a statement overnight that he "may share the vast public opinion that Elijah McClain's death could have been avoided," but it could not be proved the officers' actions had caused Mr McClain's death.

Celebrity-backed probe

TV host Ellen DeGeneres is among the celebrities to have backed the probe, tweeting: "Read what happened to #ElijahMcClain, and ask yourself what you would do if it happened to someone you knew. #JusticeForElijahMcClain."
Interest in Mr McClain's case, and others involving police killings of minorities, has surged following massive nationwide protests over the death of Mr Floyd, an unarmed African American who suffocated with an officer's knee on his neck on 25 May.

In nearby Arizona, a police chief this week offered to resign over the case of a young Latino man who died in custody.

A police body camera video released Wednesday showed Mr Lopez, 27, saying "I can't breathe" and pleading for water as he was arrested at his grandmother's house in Tucson in April.

Police responding to a 911 call regarding a "public nuisance" placed Mr Lopez face-down in handcuffs, and minutes later he passed out and died from a heart attack. The three officers resigned last week.
Probe reopened into death of unarmed black man in US state of colorado
An autopsy into the death of Carlos Ingram Lopez, who died in police custody in April, has revealed he died due to 'physical restraint'. (Supplied) Source: Supplied
Chief Chris Magnus said it was "irresponsible and unfair" to conclude Mr Lopez was "murdered by the police," and an autopsy which did not determine a cause of death found Mr Lopez had cocaine in his system and an enlarged heart.

But Mr Magnus admitted the officers had breached department policy, and offered his own resignation.

Mayor Regina Romero said in a statement she does "not believe the chief should resign."

The police shooting death of 18-year-old Latino Andres Guardado earlier this month also triggered protests in California, as anger continues to simmer across the US over the racially-charged issue.


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4 min read
Published 26 June 2020 3:50pm
Source: AFP, SBS


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