NewsIndianapolis Police Officers Acquitted In Death Of Herman Whitfield III

Indianapolis Police Officers Acquitted In Death Of Herman Whitfield III

It took almost a year for the officers to be indicted and for the police to release the complete and unedited body cam footage following repeated calls from Whitfield’s the family.

According to The New York Times, the two men were the responding officers on a call for a wellness check after it was reported that Whitfield was having a mental health crisis.

The call to the police department was placed by Whitfield’s mother, Gloria, and according to the bodycam footage, the 39-year-old Whitfield was walking around her house fully nude.

The footage also showed Whitfield running. One of the officers deployed a taser and stunned the man, which caused him to fall down, and the officers handcuffed Whitfield while one pushed his face into the floor; Whitfield told the officers, “I’m dying,” and said that he couldn’t breathe.

Later, in the footage, the two officers performed CPR on Whitfield.

It took almost a year for the officers to be indicted and for the police to release the complete and unedited body cam footage following repeated calls from Whitfield’s family to do so.

According to The Associated Press, the family also called for the firing of up to six of the police department’s officers.

In court, Daniel Cicchini, the chief trial deputy for the Marion County Prosecutor’s Office, argued in his opening statement on Dec. 2 that the officers acted “recklessly” in restraining Whitfield longer than necessary.

“Essentially, his heart and lungs could no longer function properly,” Cicchini told the jury. “When they kept him in that position, they did so recklessly,” as a result of the officers’ actions, Whitfield was “unable to breathe.”

Following the acquittals of the two Indianapolis police officers, they will be allowed to return to their normal duties after completing a refresher course.

Per the department’s standard protocol, the officers had been placed on administrative leave after their indictment.

Per The Associated Press, the suit seeks unspecified damages.

According to the lawsuit, Whitfield “died because of the force used against him” and says that he was the target of “unreasonable and excessive” force. It also argues that “Mr. Whitfield needed professional mental health care, not the use of excessive force.”

RELATED CONTENT: Indianapolis Officers Involved In Herman Whitfield’s Death During Mental Health Crisis

Source: Black Enterprise

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