Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sheriff stresses changes after Floyd death

Ending restraint type among policy moves

- By Alexis Ford

Clark County Sheriff Joe Lombardo said Tuesday that Las Vegas police have made policy changes to prevent tragedies like the death of George Floyd last year, a day after the trial began for the former Minneapoli­s police officer charged in his killing.

The sheriff spoke at a news conference Tuesday hosted by the Metropolit­an Police Department’s multicultu­ral advisory council, which it called to discuss police reform efforts.

In the 11 months since Floyd’s death, Lombardo said the department has removed the lateral vascular neck restraint — a type of chokehold — from its list of approved techniques that can be used to subdue people being taken into police custody.

He also highlighte­d a policy change requiring officers to render aid to anyone in need and intervene if one of their colleagues is acting inappropri­ately.

“As you can imagine, with the (Derek) Chauvin trial, there were officers surroundin­g the primary officer who failed to react,” Lombardo said at the conference. “And we policized that, and it’s considered a serious policy violation if you fail to intervene when you see an inappropri­ate action occurring.”

Floyd, who was Black, died in Minneapoli­s police custody on May 25 after he was accused of trying to use a counterfei­t $20 bill at a convenienc­e store. Chauvin, 45, who is white, pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for about 9 minutes and 30 seconds while Floyd stated that he could not breathe.

Chauvin is charged with unintentio­nal second-degree murder, third-degree murder and manslaught­er.

Video of Floyd’s death that circulated online sparked outrage and protests against racism and police brutality across the U.S. last summer. Several such protests on the Strip and in downtown Las Vegas resulted in chaos and confrontat­ion, with police deploying tear gas and dozens of protesters being taken into custody.

One Black Lives Matter protest in Las Vegas on June 1 ended with the death of Jorge Gomez, whom four Metropolit­an Police Department officers shot and killed outside of the Lloyd George U.S. Courthouse amid a protest dispersal order. The officers were not wearing body cameras at the time of the shooting, the department has said.

In the days after the shooting, the department said that officers opened fire at Gomez after he reached for a weapon.

But at a February news briefing in which new video of the shooting was released, attorney Rodolfo Gonzalez, who is part of a team of attorneys representi­ng the Gomez family, said Gomez was acting lawfully to protest police violence.

“He took part in the Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ion with guns on his person and a ballistics vest — all in compliance,” he said.

The officers who opened fire on Gomez were placed on paid leave in June pending Metro’s investigat­ion into the shooting, but Lombardo said Tuesday that they had all returned to work. Metro’s part of the investigat­ion has been completed and sent to the Clark County district attorney’s office, who said a public fact-finding review of the case is scheduled for April 16.

Roxann Mccoy, president of the Las Vegas NAACP and a member of the advisory council, said it’s important to acknowledg­e that Metro has been progressiv­e in its efforts to minimize police brutality, adding that many policies were put in place after Byron Williams’ death in Las Vegas in September 2019, months before George Floyd’s death.

Williams was riding his bicycle without safety lights near Bonanza Road and Martin Luther King Boulevard in the early morning hours of Sept. 5, 2019, and took off from police when they tried to stop him.

After running him down, two officers ordered him to get on the ground on his stomach, and he complied, body camera footage showed.

He repeatedly yelled, “I can’t breathe,” after officers handcuffed him, the video showed. His body went limp, and he died a half hour later at a local hospital. Williams’ death was ruled a homicide.

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