Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Family of slain man demands disclosure

Lawsuit in works against LV police

- By Katelyn Newberg Las Vegas Review-Journal

A year after Byron Williams died after yelling “I can’t breathe” while a Las Vegas officer knelt on his lower back, the 50-year-old man’s family is again calling for police to release additional body camera footage while they prepare to file a wrongful death lawsuit.

Members of Williams’ family held a virtual press conference with lawyer Antonio Romanucci on Saturday in which they called for further transparen­cy from the Metropolit­an Police Department. The family is also being represente­d by attorney Ben Crump, who has represente­d dozens of families in high-profile police brutality and vigilante justice cases, including George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Trayvon Martin, Michael Brown and Jacob Blake, according to a news release.

On Sept. 5, 2019, Williams was stopped near Martin Luther King Boulevard and

Bonanza Road for allegedly riding his bicycle without safety lights, police have said. He ran from police and was then handcuffed on his stomach and called out “I can’t breathe” at least 17 times in the body camera footage released by police last year.

His death was ruled a homicide by the Clark County coroner’s office because of a methampeta­mine overdose, with other significan­t conditions, including “prone restraint,” hypertensi­ve and atheroscle­rotic cardiovasc­ular disease, pulmonary fibrosis and granulomat­ous lung disease.

“My brother, my cousin, was murdered by the Las Vegas Police Department for riding a bike without a light,” Williams’ cousin, Renee Ricks-Jones, said during the press conference. “That pain and trauma that has caused has rippled through our entire family. We want justice, we want closure, we want accountabi­lity and we want transparen­cy.”

Four days after his death, Metro released some footage of Williams’ arrest. Family members have previously told the Review-Journal that unreleased footage shows officers dragging Williams’ limp body around a corner and dropping him on the ground while they laughed, highfived and told him nobody was coming to help him.

There is also a 14-minute span during which police turned off their cameras while awaiting medical assistance, Assistant Sheriff Charles Hank said at a Sept. 9 press conference.

“We have to contend with that period of time where the police determined on their own, all together — in the code of silence conspiracy that we have seen throughout this county — to coordinate turning off their police cameras at the same time,” Romanucci said. “It’s left up to us. It’s left up to the family and the attorneys and the community to find the truth, demand justice and bring this case to a closure.”

Metro withholdin­g footage

Last year, Metro denied a Review-Journal request for all of the body camera footage, citing the open investigat­ion. Metro did not respond to requests for comment Saturday.

While the attorneys wish to review the footage before filing a wrongful death lawsuit, Romanucci said that if Metro continues to withhold it, then the team will proceed with filing and “fight fire with fire.”

“Byron in his death, I promise you, will make a difference,” he said.

Body camera footage shows that when Williams is on the ground and first starts saying “I can’t breathe,” an officer kneeling on his lower back says, “Yeah, ’cause you’re f---ing tired of running.”

Williams would say “I can’t breathe” at least 17 times, the footage shows. An officer kneels on his lower back for about two minutes.

The two officers who first held Williams down have been identified as Benjamin Vasquez, 27, and Patrick Campbell, 28. Neither faces any charges, and both are still on routine administra­tive leave, according to the attorneys’ news release.

The footage also shows Williams’ body going limp after Metro said police had found two baggies of a white substance and an orange bottle with white pills. Hank said in 2019 that Williams was attempting to conceal the items.

Williams was then dragged to a patrol car to wait for paramedics.

“Where’s Byron’s voice?”

Romanucci said that in the aftermath of Williams’ death, police used his criminal history of drug conviction­s against him. He said that Williams’ death hasn’t gained the national attention other Black men killed by police have because Metro hasn’t released all the footage.

“This is what they’re allowed to do. They’re allowed to get out there and state their own narrative without the victim’s having a voice,” he said. “Where’s Byron’s voice? It’s in the grave.”

In an October statement released after Williams’ death was ruled a homicide, then-Clark County Coroner John Fudenberg said: “In this context, homicide means that the actions of another person or other people resulted in, or contribute­d to, the death. It is not a determinat­ion of criminal activity or wrongdoing.”

It remained unclear Saturday whether Metro intends to submit the case to the Clark County district attorney’s office for review.

Responding to a Review-Journal email, District Attorney Steve Wolfson wrote that a police fact-finding review of the case is scheduled Sept. 28.

“It is at this public hearing that all the facts and circumstan­ces surroundin­g the death of Mr. Williams will be presented, as required by Clark County ordinance. Witnesses will be called, and detailed informatio­n will be reviewed in this public setting,” Wolfson said in an email. “No decisions will be made with regard to the death of Mr. Williams until after the public hearing has concluded.”

During Saturday’s press conference, family members spoke about Williams’ smile and sense of humor.

“We have not received any justice. We haven’t received closure. We want full accountabi­lity. We want the officers to be fired,” said Williams’ niece, Teena Acree. “My uncle, he was a person. He was loved.”

 ??  ?? Byron Williams
Byron Williams
 ?? Romanucci and Blandin ?? Byron Williams poses in an undated photo. He was killed after being stopped by Metro police officers a year ago. The coroner ruled his death a homicide.
Romanucci and Blandin Byron Williams poses in an undated photo. He was killed after being stopped by Metro police officers a year ago. The coroner ruled his death a homicide.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States