San Diego Union-Tribune

JULIAN MAN WHO DIED IN CUSTODY CHOKED ON FACE MASK

Death early this year accidental, according to medical examiner

- BY JEFF MCDONALD & KELLY DAVIS

Omar Moreno Arroyo, the first inmate to die in San Diego County custody this year, choked to death on a face mask while inside a holding cell, awaiting release on a charge of being under the influence of drugs, an autopsy has concluded.

The Medical Examiner’s Office said Arroyo’s death occurred despite aggressive lifesaving measures on the part of Sheriff ’s Department employees and paramedics. The manner of death was ruled an accident.

“There were no illicit drugs, no prescripti­on medication­s, no alcoholic beverages, no tobacco products, and no notes of a suicidal nature found,” Medical Examiner Investigat­or Scott Morrison wrote in a report that accompanie­d the autopsy.

Arroyo, who was 33 and lived in Julian, was arrested by sheriff’s deputies Jan. 6 on suspicion of be

ing under the influence of methamphet­amine.

His widow, Tammy Wilson, had called 911 that morning because her husband was acting strangely. Arroyo died in a jail holding cell shortly before midnight.

The findings were released late last week, days after Wilson said in a San Diego Union-Tribune story that the Sheriff’s Department had sealed the case within hours of her husband’s death and refused for months to tell her what happened to him.

The 13-page autopsy and investigat­ive findings raised questions that a sheriff’s spokeswoma­n did not answer.

Specifical­ly, the report says a sheriff ’s detective told Morrison that Arroyo had possibly swallowed a baggie of drugs prior to his arrest but omitted any mention of the face mask.

“Jail staff informed me that there appeared to be a foreign object in his abdomen on an x-ray that appears to be (a) possible ‘baggy’ of illicit substance,” Morrison wrote.

The autopsy found no baggie or sign of drugs in Arroyo’s stomach, though he tested positive for methamphet­amine. It found the face mask.

The same report notes that video footage shows Arroyo sitting on a bench before collapsing onto the floor and experienci­ng “seizure-like activity.”

Despite the existence of video footage, there is no mention of what happened in the minutes leading up to Arroyo’s seizure.

Julia Yoo, a San Diego attorney who represents Wilson, read the autopsy and said she wants to know what

happened between the time jail staff called 911 and paramedics arrived.

“The nurses are on the second floor. This happened on the second floor. There are no references to nursing staff attempting to save Omar’s life,” Yoo said. “There is no time reference as to when Omar fell . ... How long was it between the time of the seizure until the deputies got to the cell?”

Based on the report, none of the medical staff noticed that Arroyo was choking or had an object in his throat.

It also is unclear why Arroyo was taken to jail. Under the “zero bail” policy establishe­d by the California Judicial Council to reduce jail population­s during the COVID-19 pandemic, police and sheriff’s deputies are supposed to cite people for certain crimes instead of taking them into custody.

Arroyo was arrested for possession of drug parapherna­lia — a citable offense — and for being under the influence of drugs or alcohol in a public place, despite being in his own home.

Also, according to Sheriff ’s Department policies, detainees who are suspected of being under the influence of drugs or alcohol “require a protective environmen­t” and “are in need of special observatio­n.”

The policies also say that a person suspected of ingesting a foreign object “will be placed on (contraband watch) in a medical isolation cell” or “may necessitat­e further evaluation at the hospital (emergency department).”

The medical examiner’s report makes no mention of Arroyo being placed in a sobering cell or under medical observatio­n.

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