Two Indianapolis Cops Acquitted in Fatal Stun Gun Incident Involving Man having Psychosis

Two Indianapolis Cops Acquitted in Fatal Stun Gun Incident Involving Man having Psychosis (1)

Two Indianapolis police officers accused of the death of a man who was stunned and detained on the ground during a mental health crisis were cleared of manslaughter on Friday, according to officials.

More than two years after Herman Whitfield III’s death, the jury found Indianapolis police officers Adam Ahmad and Steven Sanchez not guilty of all charges.

The 39-year-old’s father called police at 3:20 a.m. on April 25, 2022, and asked for an ambulance, claiming his son was “having a psychosis,” according to officials.

Officers discovered Whitfield naked, bleeding from the mouth, and roaming around. They eventually used a stun gun on him after he “moved quickly towards an officer,” according to the police department.

Whitfield was restrained with shackles before dying. Prosecutors said that being left restrained and prone killed him.

Whitfield’s autopsy revealed that he died of “cardiopulmonary arrest in the setting of law enforcement subdues, prone restraint, and conducted electrical weapon use,” with morbid obesity and hypertensive cardiovascular disease contributing. His death was deemed homicide.

Ahmad and Sanchez were indicted in 2023 for involuntary manslaughter, reckless homicide, and violence.

John Kautzman, a defense attorney representing the cops, said Friday that Whitfield’s death was tragic, but that the evidence indicated the officers did their best under tough circumstances and did not commit a crime.

Two Indianapolis Cops Acquitted in Fatal Stun Gun Incident Involving Man having Psychosis
Image: Jenna Watson/IndyStar

“Nobody, especially sworn police officers, are in the business of going out and harming people,” he stated. “They’re in the business of going out and trying to help people — and that’s what they were trying to do that day.”

In a statement released Friday, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Chief Chris Bailey expressed his condolences to the Whitfield family, saying, “His death was a devastating loss.”

Ahmad and Sanchez were placed on leave following the event, but will return to normal duties after refresher training, which Bailey described as usual protocol.

According to authorities, Whitfield, who stood 6 feet, 2 inches tall and weighed 280 pounds, was handcuffed on the morning of the incident.

When medics waiting outside the residence were asked to enter, they urged Whitfield to roll over, but he was unconscious, according to authorities. The handcuffs were released, CPR was initiated, and Whitfield was transported to a hospital where he was declared dead, according to the police department.

During the trial’s closing statements, Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Janna Skelton stated that the police opted to handcuff him on the floor and leave him in a prone position, resulting in his death, according to NBC station WTHR in Indianapolis.

Defense attorneys claimed that the handcuffing was legal, that Whitfield’s heart stopped before the cuffs were applied, and that the police were performing their duties, according to the station.

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