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Wednesday, April 23
The Indiana Daily Student

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Coroner: struggle with police killed man

Cincinnati man had drugs in system at time of incident

CINCINNATI - The death of a 350-pound black man who collapsed after being clubbed by police in a videotaped beating was caused primarily by the struggle, the coroner said Wednesday in a case that has heightened racial tensions.\nHamilton County Coroner Carl Parrott said Nathaniel Jones, 41, suffered from an enlarged heart, obesity and had intoxicating levels of cocaine, PCP and methanol in his blood.\nHe said the death will be ruled a homicide, but added that such a decision does not mean police used "excessive force." The coroner said he had to rule the death a homicide because it did not fall under the other categories: accident, suicide or natural.\n"Since the struggle was the result of a purposeful act, in this case, the effort by the police to subdue him, to do their jobs, that purposeful act was a primary cause of death," Parrott said.\nBlack activists say Jones' death was another example of police brutality against blacks in a city that was rocked by race riots two years ago. That unrest was sparked after a white police officer shot and killed an unarmed fleeing black suspect.\nBut city officials have said the officers in the current case were properly defending themselves against a violent suspect. The officers -- five whites and one black -- were placed on administrative leave, which is standard procedure.\nThe struggle occurred early Sunday after an employee at a White Castle called 911 to report that a man had passed out on the lawn outside. Emergency personnel arrived and reported that the man was awake and "becoming a nuisance," according to police radio transmissions.\nThe first two arriving officers were shown on a police video striking Jones after he ignored orders to "stay back," took a swing at an officer and put his arm around one's neck.\nThe officers later knocked Jones to the ground and fell on him, and jabbed or clubbed him with nightsticks at least a dozen times over several minutes until he was handcuffed. They kept yelling, "Put your hands behind your back!"\nJones' body had bruising on the lower half, but did not show signs of blows to the head or organ damage, the coroner said.\nIn Jones' car, police found cocaine and three hand-rolled cigarettes that had been dipped in methanol, an ingredient in embalming fluid that gets people high, authorities said.\nHis death certificate will list a cause of death as an irregular heart beat because of a stress reaction from the violent struggle, Parrott said.\nThe ruling came shortly after lawyers for Jones' family called for an independent investigation, claiming the coroner has mishandled past cases.\n"It's hard for me to believe anything that comes out of the coroner's office," attorney Kenneth Lawson said at a news conference.\nRelatives said Jones was a loving person who never hurt anyone.\n"They talk about Skip like he was an animal," said his grandmother, Bessie Jones. "He wasn't. Skipper was just a good old, fat jolly fella. He wasn't violent."\n"Everyone he met, that he touched, loved him," said his aunt, Diane Payton. "He was never mean."\nParrott said he has full confidence in his office's findings.\n"We're doing things in the way everyone else does it. We're doing it to national and international standards," he said.\nJohn Ester, spokesman for the prosecutor's office, said the office was in the preliminary stages of investigating the scuffle and was still awaiting the results of a police investigation.\nPhone messages seeking comment on the coroner's ruling were left with police.

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