Tony Timpa died after police knelt on his back for 14 minutes; his family is appealing a dismissal of its wrongful-death lawsuit
"Four years before the death of George Floyd, a 32-year-old man named Tony Timpa died after a Dallas police officer knelt on his back and shoulders for more than 14 minutes in an encounter captured on body-camera footage."
"In November 2016, Mr. Timpa’s family sued the Dallas officers involved in the encounter, claiming they asphyxiated Mr. Timpa, who had a history of mental troubles and was unarmed, handcuffed and barefoot during a struggle with police. He stopped moving minutes before the officer got off him, the footage shows.
A federal judge in Texas ruled last summer that the force used against Mr. Timpa wasn’t deadly or clearly excessive, dismissing the suit. Mr. Timpa’s family appealed to the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which has yet to rule. A grand jury indicted three Dallas police officers in Mr. Timpa’s death, but prosecutors declined to pursue charges."
"“The murder of George Floyd and the Chauvin trial and conviction will undoubtedly have ripple effects in courts in the Fifth Circuit and elsewhere,” said Joanna Schwartz, a University of California, Los Angeles law professor who researched the Timpa case for a book about police litigation.city attorneys have argued that the officer who knelt on Mr. Timpa, and others at the scene, didn’t act unreasonably. The city says the knee-on-back restraint was safe and justified by Mr. Timpa’s initial resistance.
“Although Timpa’s death was tragic, it did not result from an unconstitutional use of force,” the office said in a brief to the appeals court."
"Mr. Timpa’s family’s lawyer said the prolonged restraint was unnecessary and deadly—particularly in the last minutes of the restraint when he wasn’t moving."
"Prof. Schwartz said the officers’ conduct was similar in the Floyd and Timpa cases, but with important contextual differences, including the two men’s race—Mr. Floyd was Black, Mr. Timpa white—and the viral nature of the video depicting Mr. Floyd’s death."
"The Aug. 10, 2016, incident unfolded in an industrial stretch of northwest Dallas, beginning with a 911 call placed by Mr. Timpa himself.
He told an emergency dispatcher that he had schizophrenia and was off his medication. He then darted into a six-lane road and attempted to climb onto a bus, according to court records. When police arrived, private security guards had handcuffed him near a bus stop."
"In police body-camera footage submitted as evidence, Mr. Timpa can be seen rolling near the curb, kicking his bare feet and screaming. Police tried to calm him, but he kept thrashing. Officer Dustin Dillard is seen turning him on his stomach and kneeling on his back for 14 minutes, at times applying both knees.
Mr. Timpa said “help me” repeatedly before going quiet and still, with Mr. Dillard’s restraint persisting for about another three minutes, the video showed.
The officers, who said they thought Mr. Timpa was snoring, can also be heard making jokes and laughing, pretending he was a snoozing child late for school. The plaintiffs stated in court documents that the snoring sound was Mr. Timpa gasping for air.
Later, with Mr. Timpa on a stretcher, Mr. Dillard is heard saying: “I hope I didn’t kill him.” Paramedics told the officers he wasn’t breathing."
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