Herald-Tribune

Attorney: Ohio man’s death draws parallels to Floyd

- Nancy Molnar Contributi­ng: N’dea Yancey-Bragg, USA TODAY

CANTON, Ohio – Newly released body camera footage shows the arrest of an Ohio man who died during a confrontat­ion with police, which an attorney representi­ng his family said resembled the 2020 murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

Frank Tyson, 53, died April 18 during an encounter with police after he crashed his car and entered a nearby club. Both Tyson and Floyd said, “I can’t breathe,” before their deaths.

“The death of George Floyd traumatize­d and galvanized the American people – it led to a decisive call for change and an end to systemic police violence against Black men,” Bobby DiCello, an attorney for the Tyson family, said in a statement released Friday.

“It’s an unimaginab­le tragedy, that only four years later history repeats itself. Why tackle him? Why kneel on him? How could you know he lost consciousn­ess and then do nothing? These questions demand answers. And so, we will get those answers for Frank and the whole Tyson family in this time of pain, grief, and disbelief,” DiCello said.

Authoritie­s said Tyson crashed his car, then entered a private club and was acting erraticall­y. Two police officers tried to remove Tyson from the club and took him to the floor during an ensuing scuffle. Tyson, who told people at the club that someone was trying to kill him before officers arrived, yelled, “They’re trying to kill me,” as officers fought with him.

Police body camera footage released Wednesday by the city shows Tyson lying facedown on the floor with his arms handcuffed behind his back for nearly eight minutes before an officer realized he couldn’t feel a pulse. Officers took the handcuffs off and applied chest compressio­ns for several minutes.

Tyson was subsequent­ly treated by Canton Fire Department paramedics, who took him to a local hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Canton police have turned the investigat­ion of Tyson’s death over to the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigat­ion. Officers Beau Schoenegge and Camden Burch have been placed on administra­tive leave.

The Stark County Coroner’s Office sent Tyson’s body to the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner’s Office for an autopsy. The cause of death has not been released.

Kalfani N. Ture, a former police officer and assistant professor of criminal justice and African American studies at Widener University in Chester, Pennsylvan­ia, said officers should not have left Tyson lying facedown on the floor for so long after they handcuffed his arms behind his back. Ture said that creates the potential for Tyson to suffocate due to the position of his body, a condition known as positional asphyxiati­on.

The Department of Justice advised law enforcemen­t about positional asphyxia in a June 1995 fact sheet. The federal agency advised officers to “remove the subject from their stomach as soon as they are handcuffed” and monitor them carefully, according to the advisory.

 ?? PROVIDED BY CANTON POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? A screen capture from a camera worn by a Canton, Ohio, police officer shows Frank Tyson before he struggled with police on April 18. Tyson, who had crashed his vehicle before entering a local establishm­ent, died following the confrontat­ion.
PROVIDED BY CANTON POLICE DEPARTMENT A screen capture from a camera worn by a Canton, Ohio, police officer shows Frank Tyson before he struggled with police on April 18. Tyson, who had crashed his vehicle before entering a local establishm­ent, died following the confrontat­ion.

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