Times-Call (Longmont)

Family of Dizmang sues for wrongful death

- By Katie Langford klangford@denverpost.com

The family of an unarmed Colorado Springs man who died after being handcuffed and held to the ground during a mental health crisis in November 2022 filed a federal wrongful death lawsuit against the police officer and former paramedic involved in the altercatio­n.

Kevin Dizmang, 63, died Nov. 15, 2022, after an encounter with a Colorado Springs community response team consisting of Colorado Springs police officer Sean Reed, fire department paramedic Nick Fisher and a mental health clinician.

The complaint, filed in federal district court Tuesday, alleges Reed and Fisher caused Dizmang’s wrongful death, that Fisher used unauthoriz­ed and excessive force during the incident and that Reed failed his duty to intervene in an excessive use of force.

“Mr. Dizmang was in physical and mental distress,” attorney Harry Daniels said at a news conference in Colorado Springs on Tuesday. “He needed help. He wasn’t a threat to the community, he wasn’t a criminal, he was having a mental crisis.”

Daniels, an attorney from Atlanta, is representi­ng Dizmang’s estate and his daughter Kenda James in the case. Colorado Springs attorney Kevin Mehr and South Carolina attorney and former state representa­tive Bakari Sellers are also representi­ng Dizmang’s estate and James.

The lawsuit seeks a jury trial and unspecifie­d monetary damages.

Dizmang was experienci­ng a mental health crisis related to PTSD and schizophre­nia and destroying the RV where he lived alone when his family called 911 for help, according to the lawsuit.

Dizmang was “in a clearly confused and panicked state” when first contacted by the response team just after 5 p.m. and was walking into traffic on Mount View Lane near the Cragmor Mobile Home Park, the lawsuit states.

Body-worn camera footage shows Dizmang did not comply with Reed’s commands to put his hands behind his back and struggled when Reed tried to put his arms behind his back. Fisher eventually tackled Dizmang to the ground.

Fisher used his body to hold Dizmang down while Reed handcuffed him, the footage shows, and Dizmang stopped responding during the altercatio­n. After a few minutes, Reed and Fisher rolled him onto his side, sat him up and called for an ambulance.

Emergency medical personnel loaded him into an ambulance and began CPR, and Dizmang was later pronounced dead at Penrose Hospital.

The lawsuit alleges Reed did not give Dizmang a chance to calm down and comply with his orders and that Fisher put Dizmang in a chokehold after he tackled him and used his body weight on Dizmang’s neck and back, which hindered his ability to breathe.

The case was investigat­ed by the El Paso County Sheriff’s Office and turned over to the Fourth Judicial District Attorney’s Office for review. The district attorney’s office found the actions of Reed and Fisher were justified and declined to file charges in the case, according to spokespers­on Kate Singh.

The Colorado Springs Police Department and Colorado Springs Fire Department declined to comment on the pending litigation and referred to a joint statement issued in February 2023 about the incident, which described the investigat­ion into Dizmang’s death and informatio­n about community response teams.

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