INDIANAPOLIS — Two Indianapolis police officers charged in the death of a Black man — who was shocked with a Taser during a mental health crisis — acted ''recklessly" by restraining him face down longer than necessary, a prosecutor said during opening statements Monday.
Officers Adam Ahmad and Steven Sanchez were indicted by a grand jury in April 2023 in Herman Whitfield III's 2022 death. They are being tried together as co-defendants for what's expected to be a five-day trial.
Both men face one felony count each of involuntary manslaughter, reckless homicide, battery resulting in serious bodily injury and battery resulting in moderate injury, and one misdemeanor battery charge.
Daniel Cicchini, the chief trial deputy for the Marion County Prosecutor's Office, said in his opening statement that Ahmad and Sanchez held Whitfield face down on the floor of his parents' dining room longer than was necessary while he was being handcuffed.
Cicchini said the officers' actions left the man, who was obese, ''unable to breathe."
''Essentially his heart and lungs could no longer function properly,'' Cicchini told the jury. "When they kept him in that position they did so recklessly.''
He also told the jurors that the two officers' actions were ''a substantial deviation from their training.''
But Mason Riley, an attorney for Ahmad and Sanchez, said during his opening statement that Whitfield suffered from an enlarged heart. He said Whitfield, who weighed 389 pounds (176 kilograms) according to his autopsy, had died ''before the handcuffing concluded.''