MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Gov. Inslee pledges independent review of Manuel Ellis’ death

Jun 5, 2020, 6:06 PM | Updated: 6:12 pm

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TACOMA, WA - JUNE 03: People listen during a vigil for Manuel Ellis, a black man whose March death while in Tacoma Police custody was recently found to be a homicide, according to the Pierce County Medical Examiners Office, near the site of his death on June 3, 2020 in Tacoma, Washington. Protests and other events sparked by the death of George Floyd have continued in the Tacoma area after the Medical Examiner found that the cause of death in the Manuel Ellis case was caused by respiratory arrest due to hypoxia due to physical restraint. (Photo by David Ryder/Getty Images)

(Photo by David Ryder/Getty Images)

Gov. Inslee announced Friday that the state will conduct an independent review of Manuel Ellis’ death.

Manuel Ellis died March 3, 2020, from a lack of oxygen, after being restrained by Tacoma police. A medical examiner ruled the death a homicide, but found drugs and a heart condition also contributed to Ellis’ death. The Pierce County Sheriff’s office was investigating his death, but Ellis’ family had asked for an independent investigation.

Tacoma Mayor Victoria Woodards said Thursday that she wants the police officers involved in the death of Manuel Ellis fired.

The Tacoma Police Union responded to Woodards’ statement Friday morning, claiming that the mayor’s call to fire and prosecute the officers involved in Ellis’ death comes “without an ounce of evidence to support her words beyond misplaced rage.”

Gov. Inslee’s full statement is as follows:

Today, I committed to Tacoma Mayor Victoria Woodards that the State of Washington will conduct an independent review of the investigation and any charging decisions related to the death of Manuel Ellis.

I’ve been told the Pierce County Sheriff is close to completing the investigation his agency is doing on behalf of the city. That report will be forwarded to the county prosecutor, who makes the decision whether to charge the officers involved. We have no reason to doubt the work underway, and my decision does not in any way pre-judge an outcome, but the family of Mr. Ellis, the City of Tacoma and every Washington resident deserves the confidence that an extra level of scrutiny will bring.

I have spoken with Washington State Patrol Chief John Batiste and Attorney General Bob Ferguson. The patrol will review the sheriff’s investigation of the death of Mr. Ellis to ensure that a full and fair investigation has been concluded. After the prosecutor’s work is complete, I will formally grant the attorney general’s office the authority to review that work and determine whether any different charging decisions need to be made by the attorney general.

We know that Manuel Ellis was one of far, far too many Black men who died while in police custody in America, including here in Washington state. Washingtonians deserve every assurance that investigations and charging decisions related to police shootings and deaths of people in police custody are handled with urgency, independence and commitment to justice. My staff and I have met in recent days with activists, protest leaders, families of victims of police killings, law enforcement officials and experts to begin the work of creating a permanent process to give independent review to these cases.

I will continue this work and these conversations so the community and I can stand together and present state lawmakers with a package of legislation by no later than January. Our work should include laws for independent investigations, requiring police to intervene and report if they witness unlawful use of force by a fellow officer and examining the use of force—including restraint techniques.

We all want those cases to end. But until then, when these stories become part of the bitter history of racism in this country, we must make sure that each and every case is given the highest level of scrutiny.

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Gov. Inslee pledges independent review of Manuel Ellis’ death