Texarkana Gazette

Suit: Arkansas man left comatose after arrest

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BLYTHEVILL­E, Ark.—An excessive force lawsuit alleges that a police officer in northeaste­rn Arkansas crushed a man’s trachea during an arrest, leaving him in a permanent vegetative state.

Blythevill­e attorneys Jim Harris and Zach Morrison filed a lawsuit Tuesday accusing Blythevill­e officer Doyle Driskill of violating the civil rights of 29-year-old Rayshawn Warren during a Sept. 29 arrest. The lawsuit, filed on behalf of Warren’s family, also names the city of Blythevill­e, the Blythevill­e Police Department and Police Chief Ross Thompson.

Driskill was responding to calls about an intoxicate­d man trying to enter homes when he confronted Warren, who was walking up to a house in downtown Blythevill­e, according to a police report. Warren ran away from Driskill, who then pursued, tackled and restrained him until other officers arrived.

Driskill used an “arm bar” restraint on Warren, resulting in the crushing of his trachea, the lawsuit states. Warren has remained comatose since the arrest, according to the lawsuit.

Morrison said Warren’s condition is unlikely to improve and his medical bills are estimated to exceed $250,000, to date.

Driskill said in the police report that Warren resisted officers’ attempts to handcuff him. He noted that officers used a Taser to stun Warren’s thighs and abdomen, but that he continued to resist.

Warren was charged with public intoxicati­on, fleeing on foot and failure to submit to arrest.

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