Big Spring Herald

At least 15 people died in Texas after medics injected sedatives during encounters with police

- By RYAN J. FOLEY and CARLA K. JOHNSON Associated Press

At least 15 people died in Texas over a decade following a physical encounter with police during which medical personnel also injected them with a powerful sedative, an investigat­ion led by The Associated Press has found.

Several of the fatal incidents occurred in Dallas and its nearby suburbs. Other cases were documented across the state, from Odessa to Austin to Galveston.

The deaths were among more than 1,000 that AP’s investigat­ion documented across the United States of people who died after officers used, not their guns, but physical force or weapons such as Tasers that — like sedatives — are not meant to kill. Medical officials said police force caused or contribute­d to about half of all deaths.

It was impossible for the AP to determine the role injections may have played in many of the 94 deaths involving sedation that reporters found nationally during the investigat­ion’s 2012-2021 timeframe. Few of those deaths were attributed to the sedation and authoritie­s rarely investigat­ed whether injections were appropriat­e, focusing more often on the use of force by police and the other drugs in people’s systems.

The idea behind the injections is to calm people who are combative, often due to drugs or a psychotic episode, so they can be transporte­d to the hospital. Supporters say sedatives enable rapid treatment while protecting front-line responders from violence. Critics argue that the medication­s, given without consent, can be too risky to be administer­ed during police encounters.

Texas was among the states with the most sedation cases, according to the investigat­ion, which the AP did in collaborat­ion with FRONTLINE (PBS) and the Howard Centers for Investigat­ive Journalism.

The Texas cases involved the use of several different drugs intended to calm agitated people who were restrained by police. Most of them were administer­ed by paramedics outside of hospitals.

Those included the two earliest deaths documented by AP that involved the use of ketamine — men who died in 2015 in Garland and Plano. A third case involving ketamine involved a man who died in

Harris County in 2021.

The most common drug used in Texas during the incidents was midazolam, a sedative that is better known by its brand name Versed. Eight cases involved injections of the drug, including one in 2018 in which a paramedic rapidly gave two doses to a man who was restrained by officers in Bastrop.

AP’s investigat­ion shows that the risks of sedation during behavioral emergencie­s go beyond any specific drug, said Eric Jaeger, an emergency medical services educator in New Hampshire who has studied the issue and advocates for additional safety measures and training.

“Now that we have better informatio­n, we know that it can present a significan­t danger regardless of the sedative agent used,” he said.

Sedatives were often given as treatments for “excited delirium,” an agitated condition linked to drug use or mental illness that medical groups have disavowed in recent years.

The Associated Press receives support from the

Public Welfare Foundation for reporting focused on criminal justice. This story also was supported by Columbia University’s Ira A. Lipman Center for

Journalism and Civil and Human Rights in conjunctio­n with Arnold Ventures. Also, the AP Health and Science Department receives support from the

Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Science and

Educationa­l Media Group. The AP is solely responsibl­e for all content. &

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