Police Shootings / Possible Abuse Threads [merged]
On a Thursday morning in October 2020, less than five months after George Floyd was held on his stomach by Minneapolis police officers until he died, Shayne Sutherland called 911 from a convenience store in Stockton, California, and asked for a taxi.
When the operator told Sutherland he’d dialed 911, he said someone was trying to rob him.
Stockton police officers Ronald Zalunardo and John Afanasiev arrived at the store about 15 minutes later. In the meantime, a store employee had called 911, saying Sutherland was threatening him with a wine bottle.
In body camera footage that captured the officers’ response, Sutherland seems fidgety and his speech is difficult to understand at times, but he doesn’t appear violent and he isn’t armed. He cooperates with police, addressing Zalunardo as “sir” and sitting against a wall outside the store as instructed.
The officers question Sutherland. When he tells them he can’t remember why he’s under court supervision, Afanasiev says, “the drugs probably have something to do with it”.
“How long you been using meth,” Zalunardo asks. Sutherland stutters and says he’s been using cocaine.
Sutherland briefly stands, then sits when ordered to do so. A minute later he stands up again. This time, the officers tackle him to the ground and hold him belly down – a position known as prone restraint. Thirty seconds later, his hands are cuffed behind his back.
That could have been the end of the encounter. Experts say prone restraint can be a safe, effective way to subdue someone and get them into handcuffs – so long as they’re quickly placed in a “recovery position” on their side or in a seated position to allow them to breathe more easily.
But Zalunardo and Afanasiev didn’t do that. The body camera footage shows them holding Sutherland belly-down for more than eight minutes. For nearly half that time, Afanasiev lays across Sutherland’s back. Sutherland panics, alternating between moaning and screaming for help as Zalunardo, who uses his baton and body weight to help keep Sutherland’s shoulder down, repeatedly tells him, “Relax!”
“Please let me breathe,” Sutherland begs, his voice barely decipherable. In between shrieks and gasps he calls out “Mom!” He begs for help. “Please let me live.”
Before the officers notice that he’s turning colors and losing consciousness, Sutherland, his mouth bloody from being slammed and scraped against the ground, sputters: “I’m forking dead.”
Another five-and-half minutes pass before officers roll Sutherland onto his side and begin to render aid.
Sutherland was declared dead 47 minutes later at a hospital……..
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news...prone-restraint-deaths?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other