US jury acquits three American officers in killing of Black man

Jury finds Christopher Burbank and Matthew Collins — both white — not guilty of murder and manslaughter charges, and a third officer, Timothy Rankine, is adjudged not guilty of manslaughter after over two months of trial in Manuel Ellis' killing.

From left, Tacoma police officers Christopher Burbank, Matthew Collins and Timothy Rankine face criminal charges in the March 2020 killing of Manuel Ellis. / Photo: Washington State Patrol
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From left, Tacoma police officers Christopher Burbank, Matthew Collins and Timothy Rankine face criminal charges in the March 2020 killing of Manuel Ellis. / Photo: Washington State Patrol

Three Tacoma, Washington, police officers have been acquitted in the killing of an unarmed Black man whose dying pleas for air sparked protests in 2020, in a case bearing parallels to the murder of George Floyd in the same year.

Officers Christopher Burbank and Matthew Collins — both white — were found not guilty of murder and manslaughter charges on Thursday, while a third officer, Timothy Rankine, was found not guilty of manslaughter following a trial that lasted more than two months.

The officers punched 33-year-old Manuel Ellis, put him in a chokehold and shot him with a stun gun on March 3, 2020, according to witness testimony and video evidence presented at trial.

Video footage showed Collins restraining Ellis by the neck as Burbank fired a Taser into his chest as he lay on the ground.

Ellis could be heard repeatedly saying, "Can't breathe, sir," during the encounter and was declared dead at the scene.

Defence lawyers for the officers said the police stopped Ellis because he was approaching a car turning at an intersection, while a witness said she saw Ellis just standing at the intersection when police called him over to their car.

Lawyers for the officers argued that Ellis, who had methamphetamine in his system, died due to his drug use and a heart condition.

They alleged Ellis kicked the police car door, and they cast his behaviour as leading to "a situation where he created his own death," as Wayne Fricke, the lawyer for Burbank, said in his closing statement.

The officers, he said, had no choice but to respond forcefully. Collins testified that he lamented Ellis' death but wouldn't have done anything differently.

Rankine called Ellis' death a tragedy.

He was pressing his knees into Ellis' back when Ellis pleaded for breath.

"The only response at that point that I could think of is, 'If you can talk to me, you can still breathe,'" Rankine said in testimony.

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Ellis in the mirror of George Floyd

Prosecution witnesses testified that the officers were the aggressors and attacked Ellis unprovoked while he was standing on the sidewalk, and that they did not see Ellis fighting back.

The Pierce County medical examiner ruled his death a homicide caused by oxygen deprivation.

Ellis' killing occurred weeks before George Floyd's murder at the hands of Minneapolis police set off months of protests around the world over racial injustice and police brutality.

Bystander video of Ellis' death was released in June 2020, a week after Floyd was killed, leading to protests in Tacoma.

Lawyers for Derek Chauvin, the Minneapolis officer convicted of murdering Floyd by kneeling on his neck, unsuccessfully mounted a similar defence at trial, arguing that Chauvin's use of force was reasonable and that Floyd's enlarged heart and drug use likely contributed to his death.

Prosecutors called numerous experts to testify that he died from asphyxiation.

Chauvin is serving a 21-year sentence in federal prison for violating Floyd's civil rights, as well as a concurrent 22-1/2-year state sentence for his murder conviction.

According to a Washington Post analysis, half of the nation’s largest police departments have banned or limited neck restraints since Floyd's death, and it remains a focal point in larger federal police reform efforts.

The charges in Tacoma were brought by the Washington state attorney general's office, which was appointed by Democratic Governor Jay Inslee to oversee the case.

The case is the first to charge police with a suspect's death since Washington voters in 2018 approved a ballot measure that made it easier to hold officers criminally responsible in such instances.

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