Six police officers face homicide charges in
a Swiss court case that opens on Monday, June 12, 2023, following the 2018
death of a Nigerian man from a heart attack after he was pinned, face-down, for
several minutes during arrest.
The officers, whom Reuters did not name due
to Swiss privacy laws, face charges of "homicide by neglect" in the
case of 39-year-old Mike Ben Peter Amadasun, before a Lausanne criminal court.
They all contest the charges and will seek
acquittal, their lawyers said.
The case, which has some similarities with
the May 2020 killing of George Floyd in the United States, is one of four where
Black men have died during police interventions in Vaud canton since 2016. They
have sparked protests and calls for reforms.
But unlike Floyd's killing, for which officer
Derek Chauvin was convicted of murder in 2021 partly based on cellphone footage
showing him kneeling on the victim's neck, there is no footage of the incident
that allegedly contributed to Ben Peter's death.
Simon Ntah, the lawyer for the family, said
he was not hopeful for a ruling against the officers who face a maximum prison
sentence of three years.
"As long as there isn't a mechanism for
independent investigations against the police we are stuck with the same
problems," he told Reuters, complaining how the same public prosecutor who
works with police on other criminal cases is placed in charge of cases like
this one.
The indictment showed that Ben Peter drew the
attention of officers during a Lausanne drug patrol after he collected a bag
later shown to contain marijuana.
He did not comply with police requests and
the officers used pepper spray and knee kicks to the ribs and crotch to
handcuff him on the ground, it showed. He continued to struggle as he was held
face-down by several officers for 3 minutes, it said, until they noticed he
appeared unconscious.
Ben Peter was later pronounced dead after a
heart attack with multiple causes, the indictment said, including the fact that
he was held on his stomach and subjected to stress but also his obesity.
Six police officers face homicide charges in
a Swiss court case that opens on Monday, June 12, 2023, following the 2018
death of a Nigerian man from a heart attack after he was pinned, face-down, for
several minutes during arrest.
The officers, whom Reuters did not name due
to Swiss privacy laws, face charges of "homicide by neglect" in the
case of 39-year-old Mike Ben Peter Amadasun, before a Lausanne criminal court.
They all contest the charges and will seek
acquittal, their lawyers said.
The case, which has some similarities with
the May 2020 killing of George Floyd in the United States, is one of four where
Black men have died during police interventions in Vaud canton since 2016. They
have sparked protests and calls for reforms.
But unlike Floyd's killing, for which officer
Derek Chauvin was convicted of murder in 2021 partly based on cellphone footage
showing him kneeling on the victim's neck, there is no footage of the incident
that allegedly contributed to Ben Peter's death.
Simon Ntah, the lawyer for the family, said
he was not hopeful for a ruling against the officers who face a maximum prison
sentence of three years.
"As long as there isn't a mechanism for
independent investigations against the police we are stuck with the same
problems," he told Reuters, complaining how the same public prosecutor who
works with police on other criminal cases is placed in charge of cases like
this one.
The indictment showed that Ben Peter drew the
attention of officers during a Lausanne drug patrol after he collected a bag
later shown to contain marijuana.
He did not comply with police requests and
the officers used pepper spray and knee kicks to the ribs and crotch to
handcuff him on the ground, it showed. He continued to struggle as he was held
face-down by several officers for 3 minutes, it said, until they noticed he
appeared unconscious.
Ben Peter was later pronounced dead after a
heart attack with multiple causes, the indictment said, including the fact that
he was held on his stomach and subjected to stress but also his obesity.
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