Times Colonist

Officer acquitted in Tacoma death hired at nearby sheriff ’s office

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OLYMPIA, Washington — One of the three Tacoma police officers cleared of criminal charges in the 2020 death of Manuel Ellis — a Black man who was shocked, beaten and restrained facedown on a sidewalk as he pleaded for breath — has been hired by a neighbouri­ng sheriff’s office.

The Thurston County Sheriff’s Office, based in Olympia, Washington, announced on its Facebook page Monday that it had hired former Tacoma officer Christophe­r Burbank as a patrol deputy.

Burbank and two other officers — Timothy Rankine and Matthew Collins — were each cleared of criminal charges by a Pierce County jury last December. Rankine was charged with manslaught­er, while Collins and Burbank were charged with manslaught­er and second-degree murder.

Their attorneys argued that Ellis died from a lethal amount of methamphet­amine as well as a heart condition, not from the officers’ actions. The Pierce County Medical Examiner ruled the death a homicide and said it was caused by a lack of oxygen during the physical restraint.

Ellis, 33, was walking home with doughnuts from a 7-Eleven in Tacoma, about 50 kilometres south of Seattle, on March 3, 2020, when he passed a patrol car stopped at a red light, with Collins and Burbank inside.

The officers claimed they saw Ellis try to open the door of a passing car at the intersecti­on and he became aggressive when they tried to question him about it. Collins testified that Ellis demonstrat­ed “superhuman strength” by lifting Collins off the ground and throwing him through the air.

But three witnesses testified they saw no such thing. After what appeared to be a brief conversati­on between Ellis and the officers — who are both white — Burbank, in the passenger seat, threw open his door, knocking Ellis down, they said. Rankine, who arrived after Ellis was already handcuffed face-down, knelt on his upper back.

The witnesses — one of whom yelled for the officers to stop attacking Ellis — and a doorbell surveillan­ce camera captured video of parts of the encounter. The video showed Ellis with his hands up in a surrender position as Burbank shot a Taser at his chest and Collins wrapped an arm around his neck from behind.

His death came nearly three months before George Floyd’s murder at the hands of Minneapoli­s police would spark an internatio­nal outcry against police brutality.

The Tacoma Police Department found that the officers did not violate its use-of-force policy as it was then written — it had been subsequent­ly updated — and the three officers were each paid $500,000 US to resign.

The U.S. attorney’s office in Seattle has said it is reviewing the case; the Justice Department can bring prosecutio­ns for federal civil rights violations, but the scope of the review was not disclosed.

The Ellis family settled a federal wrongful death lawsuit against Pierce County, which is home to Tacoma, for $4 million US last year.

The trial was the first under a five-year-old state law designed to make it easier to prosecute police accused of wrongfully using deadly force.

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