Times-Call (Longmont)

Judge orders 3 separate trials for officers, paramedics charged

- By Sam Tabachnik stabachnik@denverpost.com

The trials for five Aurora police officers and paramedics charged in connection with Elijah Mcclain’s death will be split up into three separate proceeding­s, an Adams County District Court judge ruled this week.

A state grand jury convened by Colorado’s attorney general in September 2021 indicted Aurora police officers Nathan Woodyard and Randy Roedema, former officer Jason Rosenblatt and paramedics Jeremy Cooper and Lt. Peter Cichuniec on 32 combined counts related to Mcclain’s violent arrest and death in August 2019.

While the five defendants were indicted under one proceeding, “the factual circumstan­ces do not neatly follow a typical codefendan­t criminal matter,” Judge Mark Douglas Warner wrote in Wednesday’s order.

Woodyard — who put Mcclain in the chokehold that caused the 23-yearold to lose consciousn­ess — will be tried alone, Warner ruled. Rosenblatt and Roedema, who assisted in restrainin­g Mcclain, will be tried together in a separate proceeding.

And Cooper and Cichuniec, who injected Mcclain with the sedative ketamine, will face their own trial.

All five face charges of manslaught­er and criminally negligent homicide, among the other counts.

An Adams County judge in July found probable cause for the cases against the officers and paramedics to proceed. All five are scheduled to appear in court Friday for their arraignmen­t hearings, at which defendants typically plead not guilty and a judge sets trial dates.

Mcclain’s death became a national rallying cry for protests against police brutality, and his case prompted Colorado lawmakers to make several major changes to state law surroundin­g the administra­tion of ketamine and police use of force.

The death prompted investigat­ions at the local, state and federal level — including a consent decree levied by Attorney General Phil Weiser’s office against the Aurora Police Department.

In September, the Adams County Coroner’s Office changed Mcclain’s cause of death from “undetermin­ed” to say he died of ketamine toxicity. Paramedics gave Mcclain a toolarge dose of the sedative for his weight, forensic pathology consultant Stephen Cina wrote in the amended autopsy report.

“I believe that Mr. Mcclain would most likely be alive but for the administra­tion of ketamine,” Cina wrote.

The manner of Mcclain’s death remains undetermin­ed. Possible rulings can include homicide, accidental or natural.

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