Three Washington state police officers acquitted in killing of Black man
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[December 22, 2023]
By Joseph Ax and Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -Three Tacoma, Washington, policemen were acquitted of
homicide charges on Thursday in the 2020 killing of Manuel Ellis, a
Black man whose dying pleas for breath during a struggle with officers
bore grim parallels to the murder of George Floyd weeks later.
Officers Christopher Burbank and Matthew Collins were found not guilty
of murder and manslaughter charges, while a third officer, Timothy
Rankine, was found not guilty of manslaughter following a trial that
lasted more than two months.
Ellis' family members and their supporters expressed anger at the
outcome of the first such case brought against law enforcement officers
under a new police-accountability statute that Washington state voters
approved by referendum five years ago.
The three men were cleared of criminal wrongdoing in the death of Ellis,
33, despite witness testimony and video evidence presented at trial
showing the officers putting Ellis in a chokehold, shooting him with a
stun gun and pinning him to the street with their weight on March 3,
2020.
Video footage showed Collins restraining Ellis by the neck as Burbank
fired a Taser into his chest while he lay on the ground. Ellis, who was
unarmed, could be heard repeatedly saying: "Can't breathe, sir," during
the encounter and was declared dead at the scene.
Defense lawyers for the officers said the police stopped Ellis because
they saw him approaching a passing car in an intersection, while a
witness said she saw Ellis just standing at the corner when police
called him over to their car.
Lawyers for the officers argued that Ellis, who had methamphetamine in
his system, died from his drug use and a heart condition. They alleged
Ellis kicked the police car door, and they cast his behavior as leading
to "a situation where he created his own death," as Wayne Fricke, the
lawyer for Burbank, put it in his summation.
The officers, he said, had no choice but to respond forcefully.
CORONER RULED DEATH A HOMICIDE
Prosecution witnesses testified that the officers were the aggressors in
an unprovoked effort to subdue Ellis that began while he was standing on
the sidewalk, and that they did not see Ellis fighting back. The Pierce
County medical examiner ruled his death a homicide caused by oxygen
deprivation.
Ellis' killing occurred weeks before George Floyd's murder at the hands
of Minneapolis police set off months of protests around the world over
racial injustice and police brutality. Bystander video of Ellis's death
was released in June 2020, a week after Floyd was killed, leading to
protests in Tacoma.
Burbank, Collins and Rankine all remained free on bond and on paid
administrative leave during the trial.
Addressing a news conference after the verdict, city officials said the
Tacoma Police Department was nearing the end of its internal
investigation that could result in the discipline of the three officers,
including possible dismissal.
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Flowers, candles, and a Black Lives Matter sign sit at the base of a
mural for Manny Ellis, a 33-year-old Black man who died in police
custody, after the not guilty verdict in the trial of the three
police officers charged in Ellis’s death in Tacoma, Washington,
U.S., December 21, 2023. REUTERS/David Ryder
"I know the Ellis family is hurting, and my heart goes out to them,"
state Attorney General Bob Ferguson, whose office was appointed by
Governor Jay Inslee to prosecute the case, said in a posting on the
social media platform X.
The majority-white jury of seven men and five women deliberated for
three days before reaching their verdict.
Reaction in the Tacoma courtroom was muted as Judge Bryan Chushcoff
read the decision. A livestream showed members of the Ellis family
abruptly leaving the courtroom even as the judge polled the jurors
individually to confirm the verdict.
The defendants and supporters were seen hugging and shaking hands
with their lawyers as the proceeding ended.
When Collins' lawyer asked the judge if they were free to leave,
Chushcoff said: "I would just be careful. A lot of emotions are
running high right now," the Seattle Times reported.
A group of a few dozen people gathered on a Tacoma street corner a
short time afterward, blocking traffic, chanting Ellis' name and the
slogan, "No justice, no peace," and exhorting bystanders to join the
protest.
Leslie Cushman, founder of the Washington Coalition for Police
Accountability, questioned the fairness of the trial.
"Mr. Ellis' criminal history, medical history, personal history was
in front of everyone to see, and we never heard of the misconduct of
police or their training issues," she told the Seattle Times.
Lawyers for Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis officer convicted of
murdering Floyd by kneeling on his neck, unsuccessfully mounted a
similar defense at trial, arguing Chauvin's use of force was
reasonable and that Floyd's enlarged heart and drug use likely
contributed to his death.
Chauvin is serving a 21-year sentence in federal prison for
violating Floyd's civil rights, as well as a concurrent 22 1/2-year
state sentence for his murder conviction.
(Reporting by Joseph Ax; Additional reporting by Steve Gorman and
Costas Pitas; Editing by Aurora Ellis and Michael Perry and Miral
Fahmy)
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