Trial opens for Colorado officers accused in Elijah McClain's death
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[September 21, 2023]
By Brad Brooks
BRIGHTON, Colorado (Reuters) -Two Colorado police officers on trial for
Elijah McClain's death ignored his cries for help as they restrained
him, a prosecutor said on Wednesday in an opening statement at their
trial, but defense lawyers said it was a fatal dose of a sedative
administered by paramedics that killed the young Black man.
Lawyers for the two officers in the Denver suburb of Aurora also said
one of them had seen McClain try to grab a fellow officer's gun during
the struggle with police, justifying their efforts to restrain him.
Randy Roedema and Jason Rosenblatt went on trial for reckless
manslaughter and second-degree assault in Adams County Court for the
2019 death of McClain, 23, who died several days after the incident.
Roedema was suspended pending the outcome of the case, while Rosenblatt
was dismissed.
One other officer and two paramedics involved in the incident will have
separate trials in the coming months. All the police and paramedics
charged in the case are white.
On the night of the encounter, McClain was walking home from a
convenience store on Aug. 24, 2019. He was unarmed and appeared to be
breaking no laws, but wore a ski mask and a winter coat on a warm
evening. That triggered a 17-year-old bystander to call 911 and report
him as acting suspiciously.
Three police arrived and nine seconds after confronting McClain they
laid hands on him, according to the body camera video showed by the
prosecution.
McClain resisted and tensed up, leading to a struggle and the accusation
that he tried to grab an officer's gun, which prosecutors strongly
denied.
Such an attempt does not appear on body camera video of the encounter,
but Roedema can be heard yelling at Rosenblatt that McClain had reached
for the officer's gun. Rosenblatt later told a supervisor that he did
not feel McClain grabbing for the firearm.
Police quickly wrestled McClain to the ground, applied a "carotid"
chokehold twice and handcuffed him, while McClain complained he could
not breathe, vomiting repeatedly and choking.
Reid Elkus, Roedema's attorney, told jurors the officers had sufficient
motive for taking McClain down and using the carotid hold because of his
client's perception that McClain tried to grab Rosenblatt's gun.
"Just because a tragedy occurred, doesn't mean criminality occurred,"
Elkus told jurors.
GEORGE FLOYD PROTESTS
Initially no charges were brought in McClain's case, but it gained
attention after the 2020 death of George Floyd at the hands of
Minneapolis police sparked a summer of global protests over the
mistreatment of African Americans and other minorities by U.S. law
enforcement.
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Randy Roedema, one of three Aurora police officers in addition to
two paramedics criminally charged in the death of Elijah McClain, a
Black man who died in 2019 after being subdued and injected with a
sedative, approaches the Adams County Justice Center for a status
hearing in Brighton, Colorado, U.S., April 15, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin
Mohatt
Using the same phrase repeated by Floyd, McClain told officers "I
can't breathe" or made other pleas for help seven times, prosecutors
said.
Harvey Steinberg, Rosenblatt's attorney, told the jury the only
reason the trial was taking place at all was because of political
pressure stemming from the Floyd protests.
Jonathan Bunge, a lawyer prosecuting the case for the state of
Colorado, said McClain was "just walking home" with a plastic bag
holding three cans of iced tea and listening to music with earbuds
when confronted by police.
Bunge argued that police had operated without any reasonable
suspicion and ignored their training by failing to de-escalate or
properly check on McClain's well-being after applying the choke hold
on him.
After police restrained McClain, paramedics injected him with an
overdose of the powerful sedative ketamine, Bunge said. He then
lapsed into cardiac arrest and died days later at a hospital.
A revised autopsy report in September 2022 concluded McClain died
from "complications of ketamine administration following forcible
restraint."
Defense lawyers told jurors they would show it was the ketamine
injection given by paramedics that resulted in McClain's death.
They said body camera footage shows McClain was speaking even after
the officers had held him down for 15 minutes, indicating he was
alive when the emergency medical responders arrived and, they argue,
took control of the scene.
No Black people were among the 12 jurors and two alternates chosen
during a selection process that began on Friday.
After McClain's death, the Colorado attorney general determined that
Aurora's police department routinely violated the law by engaging in
racially biased policing and excessive use of force.
The city of Aurora agreed in November 2021 to pay McClain's family
$15 million to settle a civil rights lawsuit.
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Colorado; Additional reporting by
Daniel Trotta in Carlsbad, Calif.; Editing by Donna Bryson, Chris
Reese, Daniel Wallis and Michael Perry)
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