Tag Archives: McClain

Death of Elijah McClain: Colorado officials plead not guilty to 32 counts including manslaughter

Police officers, two paramedics and another official in Colorado who are accused of being responsible for the death of Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old Black man who died after being handcuffed and injected with a powerful sedative, plead not guilty on Friday to various charges including manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide.

The Aurora Police officers Randy Roedema, Nathan Woodyard and former Aurora officer Jason Rosenblatt, along with Fire Rescue paramedics Jeremy Cooper and Lt. Peter Cichuniec made the plea during a courtroom hearing in Brighton, a Denver suburb.

The officials did not speak except to acknowledge they understood their rights.

McClain died on Aug. 24, 2019, following a clash with police after he left a grocery store in Aurora.

ELIJAH MCCLAIN’S DEATH ATTRIBUTED TO KETAMINE ADMINISTRATED BY PARAMEDICS

Demonstrators carry placards as they walk down Sable Boulevard during a rally and march over the death of Elijah McClain in Aurora, Colo., on June 27, 2020. 
(AP Photo/David Zalubowski, File)

At the time, McClain, a massage therapist, was wearing a ski mask, according to the indictment. He entered the store, purchased an iced tea, and exited. Police then approached him.

He had not been accused of committing any crime but the situation quickly escalated.

The three officers claimed McClain was resisting their instructions and forcibly restrained him.

During their interaction, McClain was handcuffed on the ground, complained he couldn’t breathe and vomited several times, per the indictment.

ELIJAH MCCLAIN DEATH: COLORADO GRAND JURY INDICTS 3 POLICE OFFICERS, 2 PARAMEDICS 

The document said McClain lost consciousness and was injected with ketamine.

Paramedics Jeremy Cooper, left, and Peter Cichuniec, right, at an arraignment in the Adams County district court at the Adams County Justice Center January 20, 2023. 
(Andy Cross/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

Paramedics Peter Cichuniec, fourth from left, and Jeremy Cooper, fifth from left, flanked by their attorneys, left, and prosecutors, right, during an arraignment in the Adams County district court at the Adams County Justice Center January 20, 2023. 
(Andy Cross/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

McClain’s relatives have since said he wore the mask because his anemia made him cold. “I’m just different,” McClain can be heard explaining in the released body cam footage.

A police accountability law was subsequently passed in Colorado banning chokeholds and put restrictions on the use of ketamine.

A grand jury indicted the five officials who contributed to the arrest and death with 32 counts, including manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide and other charges in 2021. The indictment came after Democratic Gov. Jared Polis ordered Attorney General Phil Weiser to open a criminal investigation into the case.

An Initial autopsy report concluded the dose of ketamine was higher than recommended for someone his size but his manner of death was still listed as undetermined, not a homicide.

AURORA POLICE IN COLORADO QUESTIONED ON USE OF FORCE DURING ELIJAH MCCLAIN PROTEST: REPORT

McClain would most likely have survived if not for the dose, the autopsy also determined, though not specifying it as causing his death.

An amended autopsy report was released in September of last year.

It said McClain died as the result of complications of ketamine administration after he was forcibly restrained.

A man walks past a display showing an image of Elijah McClain outside Laugh Factory during a candlelight vigil for McClain in Los Angeles on Aug. 24, 2020. 
(AP Photo/Jae C. Hong)

Dr. Stephen Cina, a pathologist, said in the autopsy that he could not rule out that changes in McClain’s blood chemistry due to his exertion while being restrained by police contributed to his death but concluded there was no evidence that injuries inflicted by police caused his death.

ELIJAH MCCLAIN DEATH: AURORA TO PAY $15M TO FAMILY OF BLACK MAN IN FEDERAL CIVIL RIGHTS SUIT SETTLEMENT

Family members and others packed the small courtroom, where they saw the pleas and watched as the judge scheduled three separate trials for the officials.

Officers Roedema and Rosenblatt will stand trial in July. Another trial for Cooper and Cichuniec is scheduled for August ,while Woodyard’s is scheduled for September.

Megan Downing, a lawyer representing Woodyard, declined to comment at the trial, saying any defense she would offer on the allegations would get into grand jury material, which remains sealed.

Colorado attorney general Phil Weiser during a press conference announcing an indictment of the three Aurora police officers and two Aurora fire paramedics in the death of Elijah McClain on Wednesdsay, September 1, 2021. 
(Aaron Ontiveroz/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images)

The other defendants’ attorneys similarly left court without addressing the allegations.

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In 2021, the city of Aurora agreed to settle a lawsuit brought on by McClain’s parents for $15 million.

His death prompted protests against police and law enforcement.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Commitment Breakdown: Five-star 2023 CB Cormani McClain flips to Colorado

What was once rumored to be a sure thing for Florida became a lock for Miami. When the Early Signing Period came, the Hurricanes’ feather-in-the-cap win of verbally landing Cormani McClain was put in doubt when the Sunshine State prospect did not sign his National Letter of Intent. On Thursday, Colorado pulled off the biggest flip in the 2023 recruiting cycle by securing the commitment of the five-star DB out of Lakeland High School, keeping McClain away from Miami.

WHAT COLORADO IS GETTING

When McClain is on his game, there is no better corner in the 2023 class. McClain has the height, wingspan, hips and speed defensive coordinators dream of for corners. Colorado has landed a five-tool defender who can cover and bring support against the run. Expect McClain to start from day one for Colorado.

WHY THIS IS BIG FOR COLORADO

The coaching change from Karl Dorrell to Deion Sanders is bringing about a restructuring of the roster. The Buffaloes suffered through a 1-11 season in 2022, and they needed to bring new talent to Boulder. Landing a do-all talent at corner in McClain will allow the defense to shade to the rest of the field, knowing their true freshman can lock down top Pac-12 receivers in one-on-one matchups.

Prime Time made noise a year ago by pulling top-rated 2022 prospect Travis Hunter away from the D-I level to Jackson State. A year later, Coach Prime is doing it again, surprising all by adding McClain. The message is clear: Colorado will be able to recruit on a national level, which sends a message to blueblood programs across the country.

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Commitment Breakdown: Five-star CB Cormani McClain commits to Miami

The college football recruiting world was shocked on Thursday night when five-star Cormani McClain verbally committed to Miami. The second-rated player in the 2023 class was down to Alabama and Florida but picked the Canes over his other two schools.

WHAT THE HURRICANES ARE GETTING

Miami is getting the top-rated player at his position, a cover corner that all will expect to start from Day 1. McClain has the speed, height, and wingspan to make life difficult for ACC receivers. From 7-on-7 events to camps and high school games, McClain makes quarterbacks pay for going his way. The Hurricanes are getting a potential All-American with McClain.

WHAT MAKES MCCLAIN DIFFERENT

Besides being a freak athlete, McClain is just really good at what he does. From his backpedal to recognizing routes and flipping his hips, he is elite across the board in his approach to the game. There is a dog factor in McClain that gets overlooked. McClain is not loud or outspoken, his skills do all the talking on the field. Another benefit, McClain will come down and pop a receiver and/or running back.

WHY THIS IS BIG FOR MIAMI

This is a big win for Miami in more ways than one. The Hurricanes added their third five-star player to the 2023 class loading up for the future. Head coach Mario Cristobal and company do not have a three-year plan to challenge in the ACC, they have a win now approach with this class. The extra benefit is keeping McClain away from Florida and jumping up to No. 8 nationally in the Rivals’ team recruiting rankings.

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Elijah McClain died of ketamine shot from medics in 2019, report says

Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old Black man whose death in 2019 after an encounter with police helped fuel calls for law enforcement accountability, died because paramedics injected him with a dose of ketamine that was too high for someone his size, according to an amended autopsy report publicly released Friday.

The conclusion is a drastic departure from the original autopsy report, released several months after the fatal confrontation in Aurora, Colo., which said there was not enough evidence to determine how McClain died. The new findings are based on evidence, including police body-camera footage and other records, that a pathologist for the county said he requested in 2019 but did not get.

Though it still lists the manner of death as “undetermined” — as opposed to a homicide or an accident — the report could bolster the prosecution of the police and first responders charged in McClain’s death and reignite calls for greater accountability from the city.

Police had no legal reason to place Elijah McClain in chokehold, probe of death finds

McClain, a massage therapist and self-taught musician, was walking home in August 2019 when he was detained by police responding to a 911 call that someone was acting “sketchy.” Officers tackled him and put him in a carotid chokehold, which restricts blood flow to the brain. Paramedics injected him with ketamine, a powerful sedative. He went into cardiac arrest on the way to the hospital and died several days later.

In the amended autopsy report, forensic pathologist Stephen Cina said the ketamine injection was excessive for McClain, who stood about 5-f00t-7 and weighed 140 pounds.

A review of body-camera footage that police did not provide during the initial autopsy showed that McClain was “extremely sedated” within minutes, according to Cina. He said he thought McClain was struggling to breathe as he lay on a stretcher and that respiratory arrest was “imminent.”

“Simply put, this dosage of ketamine was too much for this individual and it resulted in an overdose, even though his blood ketamine level was consistent with a ‘therapeutic’ blood concentration,” Cina wrote. “I believe that Mr. McClain would most likely be alive but for the administration of ketamine.”

It was not clear whether the carotid hold contributed to his death, Cina said, noting that medical literature suggested it would not have. He said that he saw nothing on McClain’s neck that showed he died of asphyxiation and that McClain could speak after the officers let him up.

Firing upheld for officers who mocked Elijah McClain’s chokehold death

Cina also noted that McClain was “alive and responsive to painful stimuli” up to the point that he received the ketamine shot.

“It is my opinion that he likely would have recovered if he did not receive this injection,” he said.

Deaths related to ketamine toxicity are usually classified as accidents, according to the report, but Cina said the manner would remain “undetermined” because other factors could have played a role.

He added: “I acknowledge that other reasonable forensic pathologists who have trained in other places may have developed their own philosophy regarding deaths in custody and that they may consider the manner of death in this type of case to be either homicide or accident.”

In an emailed statement to The Washington Post, an Aurora police spokesman said the department “fully cooperated with the investigation.” A representative for Aurora emergency services did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment Saturday morning.

Prosecutors initially declined to charge anyone in McClain’s death, citing the lack of evidence in the original autopsy.

Some officials, medical experts and criminal justice advocates criticized prosecutors for not seeking a second medical opinion to avoid an “undetermined” manner of death.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis (D) appointed a special prosecutor to reopen the case, and a grand jury was empaneled to consider criminal charges.

Grand jury indicts police and paramedics in 2019 death of Elijah McClain

During the proceedings, the investigation of McClain’s death came under greater scrutiny when Colorado Public Radio reported that the county coroner had met with police before the autopsy was released and that police investigators were present during the examination.

In September 2021, charges were announced against three Aurora police officers and two paramedics. The defendants are expected to enter pleas in November.

Evidence that emerged during the grand jury proceedings prompted the coroner to alter the original autopsy report, but the changes remained secret for more than a year.

The amended version released Friday was made public under a court order after Colorado Public Radio and several other media outlets sued to get access to it.

McClain’s case drew little interest outside Colorado until the May 2020 murder of George Floyd by then-Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin. McClain’s death became a rallying cry in the months of protests that followed. Friends and family remembered him as a gentle person who would use his lunch break to play violin for animals at a local shelter.

Aurora last year agreed to pay $15 million to settle a lawsuit by McClain’s family. The city also banned the chokehold used in his arrest and is considering a ban on ketamine.

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Konnor McClain, newly confident, is U.S. gymnastics all-around champion

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TAMPA — A year ago, Konnor McClain had lost her confidence. She would get sick with nerves during competitions. And even as many told her otherwise, she said she felt like the “most garbage gymnast ever.”

Now she’s the national all-around champion, a fully transformed athlete who performed with calmness and consistency this weekend at Amalie Arena. McClain, 17, needed poise under pressure, and she delivered eight solid routines across two days of competition to tally a 112.750 all-around total that edged Shilese Jones.

“I never thought this could happen — ever,” McClain said. “Just looking back at last year and being where I was last year, this is just so crazy to me.”

McClain, in second place after the first day of competition, jumped into the lead when Jones fell on beam during the first rotation. Jones responded with standout performances on floor and vault, trimming her deficit to five-tenths of a point. In the final rotation, with Jones on bars and McClain on floor, Jones would have prevailed if both gymnasts repeated their routines from Friday. After McClain had an imperfect but solid floor routine, her gold medal hopes depended on how well Jones executed her usually excellent bars routine.

Jones floated through the air on her release elements with exquisite technique throughout, hitting vertical handstands and keeping her legs glued together. But on her final element, a double front tuck dismount, the 20-year-old sat to the ground, a major error that cost her the top spot on the podium. In an effort to stick the landing, Jones said, she opened from her tucked position “a tad bit early.” Jones won the silver with a 112.000, landing just ahead of Tokyo Olympian Jordan Chiles, who had a 111.900 in her impressive return to elite competition.

For McClain, a sudden decision to move from West Virginia to Texas propelled her to this moment. As she struggled last spring, she realized she needed a change and abruptly left her longtime club for World Olympic Gymnastics Academy in Texas — with about 12 hours between the decision and her departure. She trains under Valeri and Anna Liukin, the parents of 2008 Olympic all-around champion Nastia Liukin, with a handful of other elite gymnasts. Since then, her mind-set has shifted and her confidence has grown.

After the switch, McClain had a difficult road here. Her dad, Marc, died in December from the coronavirus, and her grandmother died soon after — back-to-back devastating losses for the teenager.

“It’s been really a hell of a year,” Anna Liukin said. “This kid’s matured so much. You don’t wish it on anybody, but she really prevailed.”

McClain recently dealt with stress fractures in both shins, then a concussion and an illness. McClain said she felt “70, 75 percent” ready for this meet, with her primary focus on world championships selection this fall.

But at the U.S. championships, she looked prepared and confident. She flipped high above the beam on her difficult tumbling series, securing the top score on that apparatus in addition to her all-around crown. Her improved showing on bars, scoring a 14.050 compared with a 13.300 on Friday, gave her a boost. And in the end, her floor routine, with precise leaps and tumbling passes and only small hops on the landings, helped secure the title. She stumbled out of her wolf turn — a dance element done in a squatted position with one leg extended — but after Jones’s mistake, that lapse no longer mattered.

Once Anna Liukin realized the final result, she whispered to McClain: “Guess what? You won.” There’s no grand celebration, not when others are still competing, but McClain smiled amid her surprise.

McClain had a difficult time explaining what this meant to her, adding that it might take time to soak in. But when asked about the thoughts inside her head, she had a quick answer: “Honestly, I wish I could talk to my dad right now.”

Without Simone Biles here, this competition featured a cluster of gymnasts in a tight race for that top spot on the all-around podium. Entering Sunday, only 1.55 separated the top five gymnasts — Jones, McClain, Chiles, Kayla DiCello and Jade Carey — who all made it through the first day without major errors. DiCello placed fourth with a 110.950, just ahead of Carey in fifth with a 110.900. The 1.85 margin between first and fifth place is the smallest it has been at U.S. nationals since the open-ended scoring system was introduced in 2006.

“They’re going to continue to improve and be where they want to be for worlds,” said Chellsie Memmel, the technical lead of the women’s high performance team. “This isn’t necessarily the meet, especially for the seniors, the meet you want to peak at. I think there’s room for improvement for everyone, and they’re in a good spot.”

Another top American gymnast, Leanne Wong, scratched from the competition after two events Friday and performed only on bars and beam again Sunday. Wong, the world all-around silver medalist last year, won the U.S. Classic a month ago and would have been squarely in the mix for a medal here.

Despite the disappointing end for Jones, she had a weekend with plenty of highlights. Jones tied with Wong for the bars title, and her floor routines were filled with powerful tumbling, excellent technique and secure landings. Jones’s two-day total on the apparatus bested Carey, the Olympic gold medalist on floor, to win the title.

“Two falls and second place is really only the beginning for me,” Jones said.

Jones didn’t think she would be here. She had planned to contend for the U.S. Olympic team just once, even though her father, Sylvester, would try to convince her she was nowhere near the end of her elite career and that her dream could live on.

But everything has changed. Her entire life is different now. Jones’s dad died in December after a battle with kidney disease. The date of his death, written in Roman numerals, shined in rhinestones down her left sleeve as she delivered standout performances during both days of competition, despite a toe injury. Her dad’s words inspired her to keep going, to hold on to that Olympic dream he always believed she could achieve.

After missing out on even an alternate spot for the Tokyo Games, she’s back in the mix, nearing what could be her first world championships berth this fall. In Tampa, she proved she’s one of the nation’s best gymnasts, standing on the podium next to the other athlete who could understand the grief that pervaded her path to this accomplishment.



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Konnor McClain rallies to win U.S. all-around gymnastics title

TAMPA — For years, Konnor McClain seemed destined to become the best gymnast in the country: medals and acclaim starting in elementary school, and that TV interview with Steve Harvey at age 11 where she set her sights on the 2024 Olympic all-around title.

McClain fulfilled promise on Sunday, winning the U.S. all-around title at age 17 after first-day leader Shilese Jones fell on her very last skill, her uneven bars dismount. McClain became the sixth woman since 2000 to prevail in her senior nationals debut. The other five all became the best gymnast in the world, most recently Simone Biles.

McClain’s first senior nationals was supposed to be last year, but after a cross-country move and coaching change she was not ready to compete. She watched last year’s competition inside the arena, feeling down. She had no belief that a year later, she would be on top of the podium.

“It’s so unreal,” McClain, who came back this summer from a stress fracture in each shin, a concussion and the flu two weeks ago, said Sunday night. “I’m still in shock a little bit.”

U.S. GYMNASTICS CHAMPIONSHIPS: Results

In a two-day competition, McClain trailed Jones by eight tenths going into Sunday’s final day.

Jones fell on her opening balance beam and trailed a consistent McClain by five tenths going into the last rotation. But if Jones repeated her bars score from Friday’s opening night (which was best in the field by six tenths), she would comfortably join Biles as the only non-teens to win the U.S. all-around title in the last 50 years. She appeared on her way until landing off balance, falling back and sitting down, a one-point deduction.

Soon after, Anna Liukin, the mother of 2008 Olympic all-around champion Nastia Liukin who coaches McClain with husband Valeri, whispered in McClain’s ear.

Guess what, you won, Liukin told her.

“She was a little surprised, but she smiled,” Liukin said.

McClain, the 2019 U.S. junior all-around silver medalist, was originally too young for the Tokyo Olympics but became age-eligible when the Games were postponed one year to 2021. Before last year’s meets to determine the Olympic team, the Liukins got a call from team McClain, which ultimately led to McClain moving from West Virginia to their Texas gym. She skipped nationals (and a shot at Olympic Trials) to focus on 2024.

”She wasn’t in a shape to compete,” said Liukin, adding that a mutual decision was made in McClain’s best interest to sit out.

Then last winter, McClain’s father, Marc, died from COVID-19. Her grandmother died in the same week. She competed on Friday and Sunday wearing a leotard patch with his initials.

Asked the thoughts going through her head after she won, McClain replied, “I wish I could talk to my dad right now.”

Jones was 10th at the Olympic Trials, the top finisher who didn’t go to Tokyo (either on the team or as an alternate) and initially planned to quit elite gymnastics. She was motivated to continue after talks with loved ones, including her father. Sylvester Jones Jr. died in December after a long kidney disease battle.

Jones called Friday’s all-around the best performance of her career. On Sunday, she fell on her first and last routines. On the latter, she rushed her bars dismount, piked too soon and opened up a little too early.

“Two falls and second place is just really only the beginning for me,” she said.

Jordan Chiles and Jade Carey finished third and fifth, respectively. The Tokyo medalists became the first U.S. Olympic female gymnasts to return to elite competition following an NCAA season.

“There wasn’t really any stress level,” said Chiles, who during a break between routines Sunday tried to get on the jumbotron by having Jones lift her up during the Lion King Cam bit. “But the ramp up for this was definitely I think the hardest thing I could have ever done because I did have an injury [micro tears in a shoulder labrum and bicep], and that injury kind of held me back.”

Like McClain and Jones, Chiles and Carey eye the 2024 Paris Games. As does Tokyo all-around gold medalist Suni Lee, who plans to return to elite competition next year. And perhaps Biles, who hasn’t competed since Tokyo but also hasn’t ruled out a return for another Olympic run.

First up is the world championships this fall. That five-woman team will be named after an October selection camp and will be favored for gold given the absence of Olympic champion Russia, whose athletes are banned indefinitely due to the war in Ukraine.

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The Hurry-Up: Observations from Thursday’s All-American Bowl Practice, Cormani McClain to Visit Ohio State

SAN ANTONIO – Thursday’s All-American Bowl practice for the West team was much more lighthearted than Wednesday afternoon’s joint practice with the East. 

Between the practicing of trick plays and a lower-than-usual intensity level just two days away from Saturday’s game, there weren’t as many observations to be gleaned from Thursday, but Eleven Warriors was on hand for practice, nonetheless. Here are several observations from Thursday’s practice:

  • It’s easy to understand why two of the players on the West team would be distracted, at least. OSU offensive lineman commitment Carson Hinzman and signee George Fitzpatrick both learned of Greg Studrawa’s firing halfway through the practice, and were noticeably shocked by the news. Both remain committed to Ohio State, however.  
  • In non-Studrawa news, Devin Brown remains as impressive as ever with his arm strength. Even Hinzman raved about him after practice concluded. “He launched a 50-yard bomb, that’s nuts. I’m from Wisconsin and a school that runs triple options, so that’s like watching a spacecraft take off for the first time.”
  • The West team worked on installing lots of throwback screen plays in Thursday’s morning session. Brown threw at least four or five. 
  • There were also trick plays galore. First was a wide receiver reverse pass downfield, and Ohio State 2022 four-star signee Kyion Grayes was given the honor of throwing the first one. 
  • Brown showed he’s got some hands too, apparently, on another trick play.
  • Stop me if you’ve heard this before, but in 11-on-11 drills, Caden Curry beat his man on the play and would have sacked Brown if he was allowed to hit him, but the All-American Bowl practices are minimal contact with no contact allowed on quarterbacks. 

McClain to visit Ohio State

Ohio State could be hosting a five-star 2023 cornerback in a few weeks. 

Cormani McClain, rated the fourth-best player in the 2023 cycle and the top cornerback per 247Sports’ composite rankings, told On3 this week he plans to visit five schools soon: Ohio State, Alabama, Miami, Michigan and Oklahoma. That list is somewhat different than the top five McClain put out in November, which consisted of Ohio State, Florida, Florida State, Alabama and Miami. 

Obviously, landing a talent of McClain’s caliber would be monumental for OSU, but its top cornerback target for 2023 remains AJ Harris, who recently delayed his original commitment date of Jan. 11. But if the Buckeyes could somehow land both, if you want to dream, the Ohio State coaching staff would certainly be happy to have them.

Aguero flirts with Buckeyes

One of the top safeties in 2023 seemingly has Ohio State on his mind. Joenel Aguero, a four-star recruit rated the second-best safety prospect in the 2023 class, posted a photo of him in an Ohio State uniform from his visit in June.

The Buckeyes already have one safety committed in the 2023 class in Cedrick Hawkins, but they’d gladly take another, especially one of Aguero’s caliber. Aguero’s lead recruiter from Ohio State was Matt Barnes, who recently left to become the defensive coordinator at Memphis, so it will be interesting to see how his relationship with OSU evolves. But if one tweet is any indication, he’s still considering them as an option.



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Elijah McClain: Aurora, Colorado, to pay $15 million to his family to settle lawsuit

The settlement was first announced in October but was finalized after a mediation hearing with McClain’s family members in US District Court on Friday.

The multi-million-dollar payout is the latest in a series of high-profile police misconduct settlements in which cities have paid millions of dollars to surviving family members.

In Minneapolis, Minnesota, the family of George Floyd received a $27 million settlement. In Louisville, Kentucky, the family of Breonna Taylor, who was shot dead in a police raid, received a $12 million payment.

“No amount of money can change what happened or erase the pain and heartbreak experienced by the family over his loss,” Aurora City Manager Jim Twombly said in a statement issued to CNN. “The settlement is an important step in moving forward with the city’s ‘New Way’ plan to restore the community’s trust in public safety, while avoiding a protracted legal process that does not serve the best interests of the city or the family.”

Aurora will pay $5 million of the settlement out of the city’s general fund, while the other $10 million will be covered by the city’s excess liability insurance policy. The Aurora City Council approved the $15 million at a meeting in July.

In August 2019, McClain, 23, was stopped by police while walking home from a store, placed in a carotid choke hold and then injected with ketamine. His mother, Sheneen McClain, filed a federal lawsuit in 2020 against the City of Aurora and the police officers and fire department members involved in her son’s death.

Last month, her attorneys announced the case had been settled in principle, resolving all claims in the federal civil rights case.

Attorneys for Sheneen McClain confirmed the $15 million figure to CNN and issued a statement: “No amount of money will ever bring Elijah back to his mother. Ms. McClain would return every cent for just one more day with her son. There will be an allocation hearing in the near future to determine the distribution of the settlement between Ms. McClain, who raised Elijah as a single parent, and the biological father.”

“Hopefully this sends a message to police everywhere that there are consequences for their actions,” LaWayne Mosley, Elijah’s father, said in a statement. “I hope Elijah’s legacy is that police will think twice before killing another innocent person.”

Spurred by protests in Aurora and a viral online petition, Gov. Jared Polis announced a reexamination of the case last year. Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser was appointed as special prosecutor and opened a grand jury investigation into the case in January.

In September, a Colorado grand jury indicted three police officers and two fire department paramedics involved in McClain’s death. Each was indicted on charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide as part of a 32-count indictment.
The Colorado Attorney General’s Office launched a 14-month investigation into the Aurora police and fire departments. The investigation found the police department had a pattern of practicing racially biased policing and excessive force and had failed to record legally required information when interacting with the community.

Earlier this week, the city and the state of Colorado reached an agreement on the terms of a consent decree to resolve Aurora Police Department and Aurora Fire Rescue issues identified in a September “Patterns and Practices” report.

The consent decree covers four areas identified in the Attorney General’s report: Racially Biased Policing, Use of Force, Documentation of Stops, and Ketamine and Other Chemical Restraints.

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John McClain calls for the Texans to trade Deshaun Watson

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The Houston Texans seem to think they’ll win a standoff with quarterback Deshaun Watson. John McClain of the Houston Chronicle knows that the team won’t.

McClain, who has covered the Texans since their debut in 2002 and the Houston Oilers before that, makes the case that the time has come for the Texans to trade Watson. McClain’s voice is an important one; he’s been part of the fabric of Houston sports for decades. His words have impact. His voice has influence. Any Texans fans who don’t already understand and support Watson’s concerns will be more likely to do so once reading McClain’s column on the matter.

Many national voices have been saying for weeks what McClain is currently saying. It will be much harder for the Texans to ignore McClain than it has been for the team to ignore the opinions of outsiders.

McClain also makes a point locally that some have made nationally: The Texans should try to pit the Jets against the Dolphins for Watson, which could spark a bidding war that will get the Texans even more for Watson.

There are conflicting reports on whether Watson actually wants to play for the Jets, however. The challenge for Watson becomes finding a new team that, in giving up whatever it must to get Watson, won’t plunge into a perpetual 6-10 cycle during Watson’s prime years. The Dolphins, with the third overall pick (from Houston) and second-year quarterback Tua Tagovailoa, seem to have the ammunition to make the deal without compromising the current trajectory of the team.

The Dolphins also would be well-suited to admit that, as short-list franchise quarterbacks go, Tagovailoa likely won’t become one.

Whether it’s the Dolphins, Jets, Broncos, 49ers, Panthers, or someone else, McClain is right. The Texans need to accept reality and get the best deal for Watson, now. As time passes, interested teams will move on to other options, narrowing the universe of potential Watson destinations. Few doubt that Watson will stay away from the team, which means that the Texans need to be prepared to not have Watson this year and to not get anything in return for him, other than the $20.2 million he’d forfeit and/or pay for the privilege of not playing for the Texans.

That money, while hardly chump change, will do nothing to make a bad team better. Jerking around Watson won’t do much to persuade players with options to choose the Texans, either.

That’s the other issue that should concern the Texans. Other players are watching this steaming vat of dysfunction, looking for signs that the Texans willing and able to admit their wayward course and turn things around. Setting up a season-long standoff with Watson is not the way to do it; acknowledging responsibility for the deterioration of the relationship becomes the first step in persuading others that the Texans understand what it will take to begin to behave like a normal NFL franchise.

Getting rid of Jack Easterby wouldn’t hurt, either. But the Texans need to re-learn to walk before they can re-learn to run.

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