Antelope Valley Press

Lawsuit blames LAPD for August death of burglary suspect

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — A lawsuit filed Tuesday alleges police caused the wrongful death of a burglary suspect by improperly using a stun gun and excessive force after the man had surrendere­d.

Police officers Tased Daniel Rivera, 37, four times and kneeled on his back after he had surrendere­d and was on his stomach in a paved wash in Arleta last August, according to the federal suit filed on behalf of his mother and son.

Officers had been called to the scene by a report that a man was trying to enter homes and they spotted Rivera, who jumped a fence and went down into the wash, authoritie­s said.

Video from a police body camera shows a half-dozen officers around Rivera in the wash. The video shows officers struggling to handcuff Rivera, who seems to be tensing his hands. Officers repeatedly warn him to stop resisting. After some minutes he is cuffed and his legs hobbled. Police then call for medical assistance.

About eight minutes after paramedics arrived, Rivera became unconsciou­s, according to a Los Angeles County medical examiner’s report. He died at the scene.

The lawsuit alleges that Rivera had surrendere­d, posed no threat and had shown signs of struggling to breathe yet even after he lay motionless, officers didn’t perform first aid and delayed calling for medical help.

The lawsuit contends that officers caused Rivera’s death by “piling on” him as he lay face down, Tasing him four times, using their full body weight to restrain him and causing “positional asphyxiati­on.”

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