2nd Denver-area police officer acquitted in death of Elijah McClain
BRIGHTON, Colo. — A second Denver-area police officer was acquitted Monday in the 2019 death of Elijah McClain, who was put in a neck hold and injected with ketamine after being stopped by police as he walked home from a convenience store.
The jury found Aurora, Colo., police officer Nathan Woodyard not guilty of homicide and manslaughter after a weeks-long trial in state district court. He faced years in prison if convicted.
Defense lawyer Megan Downing said, “We believe it was the right verdict, not an easy one.” Woodyard declined to comment.
McClain’s mother, Sheneen McClain, who was in the courtroom, wiped tears from her eyes after the verdict was read.
The case received little attention until protests over the 2020 killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis sparked renewed outrage over McClain’s death. The 23-year-old Black man’s pleading words captured on police body camera video, “I’m an introvert and I’m different,” struck a chord.
Jurors have convicted a Denver-area police officer and acquitted another of charges in the 2019 death of Elijah McClain.
An earlier trial against two other officers resulted in split verdict, with one convicted of homicide and third-degree assault and the other officer acquitted.
Unlike the first two officers who were prosecuted, Woodyard took the stand during his trial. He testified that he put McClain in the neck hold because he feared for his life after he heard McClain say, “I intend to take my power back” and another officer say, “He just grabbed your gun, dude.”
McClain died after being put in the neck hold, then pinned to the ground by Woodyard and several other officers before he was injected by paramedics with an overdose of ketamine.
Defense attorneys stressed Woodyard was not there during crucial minutes when McClain’s condition was deteriorating. Body camera video seen by jurors showed Woodyard stepping away for part of the confrontation.
Two paramedics are awaiting trial later this month.
A local prosecutor in 2019 decided against criminal charges because the coroner’s office could not determine exactly how the massage therapist died. But Colorado Gov. Jared Polis ordered state Atty. Gen. Phil Weiser’s office to take another look at the case in 2020 and a grand jury indicted the officers and paramedics in 2021.
Emergency physicians withdraw support for ‘excited delirium,’ a condition based on discredited research and racial biases that has absolved police of culpability.
The killings of McClain, Floyd and others triggered a wave of legislation that put limits on the use of neck holds in more than two dozen states. Colorado now tells paramedics to not give ketamine to people suspected of having a disputed condition known as excited delirium, which had been described in a since-withdrawn emergency physicians’ report as manifesting symptoms including increased strength. Critics have called it unscientific and rooted in racism.
McClain was stopped Aug. 24, 2019, while walking home from convenience store on a summer night, listening to music and wearing a mask that covered most of his face. The police stop quickly became physical after McClain, seemingly caught off guard, asked to be left alone. He had not been accused of committing any crime.
Woodyard and other officers told investigators they took McClain down after hearing Officer Randy Roedema say, “He grabbed your gun, dude.” Roedema later said Officer Jason Rosenblatt’s gun was the target.
Paramedics injected McClain with ketamine as Roedema and another officer who was not charged held him on the ground. He went into cardiac arrest en route to the hospital and died three days later.
Police in Aurora, Colo., have released photos that show officers smiling as they reenacted the chokehold used on Elijah McClain, a Black man who died.
Roedema was convicted recently of the least serious charges he faced, which could lead to a sentence of anywhere from probation to prison time.
Rosenblatt was acquitted of all charges. His lawyer said the most junior officer on scene was a scapegoat in a prosecution driven by politics.
In both trials, the defense sought to pin the blame for McClain’s death on paramedics Jeremy Cooper and Lt. Peter Cichuniec. But while attorneys in the first trial suggested McClain bore some responsibility for his medical decline by struggling with police, Woodyard’s lawyers seemed more sympathetic to McClain.
Woodyard said he put his arm around McClain’s neck and applied pressure on its sides to stop the flow of blood to McClain’s brain and render him briefly unconscious. The technique, known as a carotid control hold, was allowed at the time but later banned in Colorado, one of more than two dozen states that took steps to limit neck restraints after Floyd’s killing.
Prosecutors disputed that McClain ever tried to grab an officer’s gun and it can’t be seen in body camera video.
The city of Aurora in 2021 agreed to pay $15 million to settle a lawsuit brought by McClain’s parents.
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