Video shows Irvo Otieno being pinned to the floor in the moments before his death
Audio By Vocalize
Surveillance video released
by a prosecutor Tuesday shows Irvo Otieno being pinned to the floor
by multiple security officers at a Virginia state mental health facility in the
moments leading up to his death earlier this month.
Dinwiddie County Commonwealth’s Attorney Ann Cabell Baskervill’s office
also released 911 calls about the incident in which a caller described Otieno
as “very aggressive” and repeatedly asked for an ambulance, saying he was not
breathing.
Taken together, the video and emergency calls offer further details of
the final moments of Otieno, a 28-year-old Black man who died March 6 as he was
transferred from a Henrico County jail to Central State Hospital, according to
Baskervill.
Seven sheriff’s deputies and three hospital employees were
indicted by a grand jury Tuesday on a charge of second-degree murder, according
to court documents. In a hearing last week for the charges against the
deputies, Baskervill told the court, “They smothered him to death.”
The newly released video
begins as Otieno, bound by his hands and feet, is forcibly taken into a room
and dragged into an upright seated position on the floor with his back against
a chair. Ten minutes later, after Otieno has turned onto his side with three people
holding him, his body jerks, and five more deputies and workers move to pin
Otieno to the floor.
A clear view of Otieno is blocked in much of the video, but one deputy
appears to be lying across Otieno for most of the incident as he is forced onto
his stomach. Eventually, Otieno is rolled onto his back, where several deputies
appear to be restraining him with their knees. One deputy holds Otieno’s head
still by grabbing his braided hair.
After 12 minutes of Otieno being pinned to the ground, one deputy can be
seen shaking Otieno’s hair and attempting to take a neck pulse, but Otieno is
unresponsive. Three more minutes pass before CPR begins, with Otieno’s limbs
still shackled.
Medical workers from the hospital are seen converging on the room as CPR
continues for nearly an hour. After he is pronounced dead, Otieno is covered in
a white sheet, still lying on the floor, his body briefly left alone in the
room.
The time stamp on the video shows Otieno’s body being covered at 5:48
p.m.
Baskervill initially declined to
release the video but changed course after Otieno’s family approved. The
recording does not include audio.
Family saw video last week
Otieno’s family and their attorneys
watched the video last week and said they were disturbed by how Otieno was treated
during a mental health crisis.
“My son was treated like a dog,
worse than a dog,” Otieno’s mother, Caroline Ouko, said at a news conference.
“I saw it with my own eyes on the video.”
Civil rights attorney Ben Crump,
who is representing the family, compared the video to that of the murder
of George Floyd, who was handcuffed, forced to the ground and held down by
Minneapolis police officers in May 2020. That case sparked nationwide protests
over police use of force, especially against people of color.
“Irvo needed a helping hand. What
he got was an overdose of excessive force,” Crump said Tuesday at a news
conference with the family.
Crump said Otieno was not being
aggressive or resisting. “He was trying to breathe,” he told reporters. “If you
were down there, restrained and all of these people on top of you, you would be
trying to breathe. You would try to move, too, to let your lungs expand.”
Crump also discussed how the video
shows that no one else in the room tried to help during the entire 11 minutes
that Otieno was being smothered.
Mark Krudys, another family
attorney, described Otieno as “gasping for breath” in the video.
“Everybody has an obligation to
intervene in that circumstance, to say, ‘No, that’s not right.’ But nobody
intervened,” he said. “And then, when his body was lifeless, and his pants were
dangling on him, they didn’t do anything.”
Ouko said of Tuesday’s legal
developments, “Those 10 monsters. Those 10 criminals. I was happy to hear that
they were indicted and that is just the beginning step.”
An attorney for one of the deputies
charged in the case told CNN he’s “disappointed” the prosecutor released the
video because he thinks it could influence the jury pool.
“I know we were going to file a motion to not have that released,” said attorney Caleb Kershner, who represents deputy Randy Joseph Boyer. “Unfortunately, it’s too late. It’s been released. So I think that was done somewhat strategically by the Commonwealth. That is her prerogative, she can do that. She doesn’t have to do that. She chose to do that last night.”
What the 911 calls appear to show
Employees at Central State
Hospital called 911 multiple times to report Otieno wasn’t breathing and had
been “aggressive” at one point, according to 911 calls and the dispatch audio
provided to CNN by the Dinwiddie County Commonwealth’s Attorney’s office.
In what appears to be the first call, at 4:40 p.m., an employee can be
heard asking for EMS help, saying they’re administering CPR but that the
patient is “very aggressive.”
“The patient is a new admission, so we’re still in the admission unit,
and then he’s very aggressive,” the employee says. “They’re doing CPR right
now.”
The dispatcher asks for clarification on Otieno’s condition, “I’m sorry,
is the patient aggressive or is he not breathing?”
“He used to be aggressive,
right, so they’re trying to put him in a restraint, then eventually he is no
longer breathing,” the employee says.
In another call that appears to take place at 5:02 p.m. a stressed
hospital employee says they called “at least 15 minutes ago,” and were still
looking for medical help for an “emergency.”
“You said they were en route the last time, I mean, how far were they
coming from?” the employee asks the dispatcher.
“Ma’am they’re coming and they’re coming as quickly as they can,” the
dispatcher responds.
“This is just totally unacceptable, and y’all know it too. Totally
unacceptable,” the employee responds.
Baskervill told CNN in an interview with CNN’s Brian Todd that she
believed the hospital didn’t make the 911 calls until after Otieno had died.
The surveillance video from the hospital obtained by CNN does not clearly
show what time Otieno first appears unresponsive, but an officer is seen
attempting to take a pulse from his neck at 4:39 p.m. That appears to be around
the time that hospital employees first called 911 based on the file names of
the 911 recordings provided to CNN.
CNN has reached out to the hospital for clarification on when the initial
911 calls were placed.
How Otieno ended up in custody
Otieno’s family is originally from Kenya, and Irvo came to the US at age
4, Krudys, an attorney for the family, told CNN.
He graduated in 2012 from Douglas S. Freeman High School, where –
according to the Richmond Times-Dispatch – he played football and
basketball, and he attended college in California. Otieno also had a passion
for music and was working to become a hip-hop artist, his family said.
Yet he also struggled with mental illness, his family said. Ouko said her
son had long stretches where “(you) wouldn’t even know something was wrong,”
and then there were times when “he would go into some kind of distress and then
you know he needs to see a doctor.”
Otieno’s death came three days after he was taken into custody under an
emergency order.
On March 3, Henrico Police responded to a report of a possible burglary
and encountered Otieno, police said in a news release. Police officers – along
with the county’s crisis intervention team – put him under an emergency custody
order due to their interactions with and observations of him, police said.
According to Virginia
law, a person can be placed under an emergency custody order when there is
reason to believe they could hurt themselves or others as a result of mental
illness.
Krudys said Otieno was experiencing a mental health crisis on March 3,
and his mother was at the scene and implored police not to be aggressive with
him.
Otieno was taken for evaluation to a hospital, where he became
“physically assaultive towards officers,” police said. He was held on three
counts of assault on a law enforcement officer, disorderly conduct in a
hospital and vandalism, police said.
At around 4 p.m. on March 6, Otieno was taken to be admitted to Central
State Hospital, a state-run mental health facility south of Richmond, by the
Henrico County Sheriff’s Office, according to the commonwealth attorney’s
office. It’s not clear why deputies transferred Otieno.
State police investigators were later told Otieno became “combative” and
was “physically restrained” during the intake process, the attorney’s office
said in a statement on March 14. He died at the hospital, the office said.
10 have been charged
The video was key to the 10
people being charged with second-degree murder, Baskervill, the prosecutor
said.
“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said Baskervill, referring to video
showing his death.
Baskervill characterized his behavior in the video as “being distressed,
rather than assaultive, combative.”
Seven Henrico County deputies, who turned themselves in to state police
last week, are on administrative leave as investigations by their agency and
state police continue, Henrico County Sheriff Alisa Gregory said in a
statement.
CNN has sought comment from the deputies. Kershner, Boyer’s attorney,
told CNN last week they had yet to see video but claimed “nothing was outside
of the ordinary” in the lead up to his death.
“They delivered him as fast as they could because obviously this was a
man in tremendous need of some sort of medical attention,” Kershner said. He
added that his client noted they had dealt with Otieno “for a long time and he
had a significant amount of violent noncompliance.”
Peter B. Baruch, an attorney for deputy Bradley Thomas Disse, said he “is
looking forward to his opportunity to try this case and for the full truth to
be shared in court and being vindicated.”
Three Central State Hospital workers who were arrested last week have
been placed on leave “pending the results of the legal proceedings,” the
Department of Behavioral Health and Developmental Services and Central State
Hospital said in a statement.
They were expected to appear in court Tuesday before a grand jury, according
to online court records. It was not clear if they have attorneys.
The Henrico Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 4, the local law enforcement
officers’ union, “stands behind” the deputies, it said in a statement on
Facebook.
“Policing in America today is difficult, made even more so by the
possibility of being criminally charged while performing their duty,” the group
said. “The death of Mr. Otieno was tragic, and we express our condolences to
his family. We also stand behind the seven accused deputies now charged with
murder by the Dinwiddie County Commonwealth’s Attorney Ann Baskervill.”


Leave a Comment