Attorneys for the family said the deputies and jail medical staff members who looked on as Christian Black sat slumped in a restraint chair should be criminally charged in his death.

“There was no sense of urgency,” said his father, Kenya Black. “You could clearly see he was unconscious.”

Black, 25, of Zanesville, died on March 26, two days after he was taken from the Montgomery County jail to a hospital in Dayton. He was in the jail after police said he crashed a stolen car.

The county coroner’s office said last week that Black likely died from positional asphyxia, which happens when the chest can’t expand, starving the body of oxygen. His death, which is still under investigation, was ruled a homicide by the coroner.

  • Kyrgizion@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    37
    ·
    2 days ago

    Worst part is I went “Oh yeah, I saw this story yesterday” and then realized that no, that was about a Texas jail, this is Ohio…

    • AlecSadler
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      5
      ·
      1 day ago

      I like this way of thinking. If they’re going to treat me as a violent threat, I might as well be one.

  • greybeard@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    11
    ·
    2 days ago

    The hoops that the press will jump through to avoid saying the police killed a man or prison guards are accessories to murder is mind boggling.

    “Man shot in police altercation during traffic stop sustained critical injuries and dies in the hospital”

    Vs.

    “Police killed a man during a traffic stop”

    • Ebby@lemmy.ssba.com
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      5
      arrow-down
      1
      ·
      2 days ago

      While it is easy to connect some dots and draw an opinion, without due process all are innocent until proven guilty. Free Speech is not free of conquences and what seems like a logical conclusion today is not a guarantee at the end of the trial. There is no oopsiedaisy exception in libel law.

      • greybeard@lemm.ee
        link
        fedilink
        arrow-up
        5
        ·
        2 days ago

        Fair.

        But when an officer discharges their weapon it’s in the police report, which is publicly available.

        If no other weapons are involved and someone is shot then it’s a fact that they shot whoever was hit by a their bullet.

        Whether they are guilty of homicide is a decision for the court. Whether they killed someone is a matter of fact.

  • Apytele
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    7
    ·
    edit-2
    2 days ago

    I once saw a guys breathing rate shoot to 36 while in ambulatories after about a week in the chair. Don’t get me wrong he needed that amount of restraint he was so manic he was screaming incomprehensibly and trying to ram his head into walls so hard it shook the unit 24/7 despite getting sedatives that should have taken down a horse but the entire night shift staff had been telling dayshift he needed a chest xray for almost that entire time (standalone psych hospital, radiology wasn’t there overnight). Every once in a while his breathing just sounded… chunky. We didn’t like it but the lead psychiatrist dgaf.

    Anyway he lived without any long term complications but only because we caught it the second it happened and we got him on oxygen and airlifted to the university right away (this was up in the mountains). And I shit you not afterwards a coworker said they still thought he was exaggerating like the University would have admitted an extremely violent psych patient to ICU without radiologic confirmation. Somebody said something similar about a patient who stroked out on me and that personally I watched them give tpa to right there on the CT table after confirmation of ischemia when I briefly worked a COVID psych unit.

    And this was psych where people at least slightly care about the patients. I get so many correctional offers (that first one was actually a forensic psych unit) and I love love LOVE that patient population but I could barely handle how the psych unit treated those people I don’t think I could handle corrections. Even just that one guy my hair almost started falling out watching him breathe for a week straight. I was still a technician at the time so I was just there sitting 1:1 with him for hours at a time retaking his respiratory rate every 15 minutes and also every time it sounded chunky again and again and again (when you do care, they burn you out).