Las Vegas Review-Journal

Las Vegas settles with wife of man in coma

Suit says spouse suffered heart attack in jail

- By Shea Johnson Contact Shea Johnson at sjohnson@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0272. Follow @SHEA_LVRJ on Twitter.

The city of Las Vegas has agreed to pay $160,000 to settle federal claims brought by the wife of a man who went into a coma inside the city jail five years ago and never recovered.

Ronald Bynum was arrested in February 2016 in North Las Vegas for marijuana possession, obstructio­n and resisting arrest and, according to a federal lawsuit, thrown to the ground, beaten and stunned by police officers despite showing signs of obvious mental distress.

North Las Vegas police failed to give Bynum, 55 at the time, adequate medical attention, the lawsuit alleged. They took him to the Las Vegas Detention Center, which North Las Vegas used through a cooperativ­e agreement with Las Vegas.

“While there, the jailers failed to allow him treatment for his worsening medical condition, beat him and let him suffer a cardiac arrest,” the federal complaint said, indicating that Bynum had a heart attack three days after entering the jail. “The jailers resuscitat­ed him and sent him to Sunrise Hospital in a coma.”

Bynum has remained in a coma at a long-term care facility, according to two federal complaints filed in 2017 and 2018. It was unclear Wednesday whether his status had changed, although a Las Vegas staff report Wednesday indicated it had not.

The lawsuit alleged that Bynum, who was “suffering from a severe mental condition,” had continued to behave erraticall­y while in jail and was placed in administra­tive isolation pending a psychiatri­c evaluation the day after his arrival. Inside the jail, the lawsuit said, he was chained to a bench in his cell.

On Wednesday, the Las Vegas City Council authorized the $160,000 payout to resolve all claims against the city, its former public safety chief and 36 city correction­s officers, a city staff report shows.

A city spokesman declined to comment on the settlement.

Report suggests injuries minor

Bynum’s interactio­ns with police began when he called authoritie­s, believing his home was being burglarize­d. Bynum, who was “speaking very rapidly and not speaking in clear sentences,” told three officers who arrived at the call that a man was inside his house, which Bynum allowed the officers to check, according to a police report obtained by the Review-journal.

Officers found no one inside, but an officer did find a bag with 14.7 grams of marijuana, the report said. When officers began to ask Bynum questions, including whether he had a medical marijuana card, he reportedly became agitated, started yelling and tried to enter his house through the garage.

An officer tried to escort Bynum outside of the garage when Bynum pulled away and started to fight with police, according to the report. Officers, including one who said he used a stun gun to Bynum’s right buttock, were able to get him to the ground and into custody.

Bynum suffered a cut below his right eye and scrapes to his right wrist, and he was medically cleared by an ambulance called to the scene, according to the report.

North Las Vegas, which was also sued by Bynum’s wife, settled the case against it and police personnel for no money, according to city spokesman Patrick Walker. The settlement also included no non-monetary terms, Walker said.

A message left with the office of Bynum’s lawyer on Wednesday seeking comment was not returned.

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