Current:Home > NewsWashington state House overwhelmingly passes ban on hog-tying by police -Infinite Edge Capital
Washington state House overwhelmingly passes ban on hog-tying by police
View
Date:2025-04-16 05:35:04
SEATTLE (AP) — The Washington state House overwhelmingly approved legislation Wednesday that would ban police from hog-tying suspects, a restraint technique that has long drawn concern because of the risk of suffocation.
“This practice is dehumanizing, and it’s dangerous,” said Democratic Rep. Sharlett Mena during the vote. “And yet hog-tying is still authorized by a small number of jurisdictions in Washington.”
The vote came nearly four years after Manuel Ellis, a 33-year-old Black man, died in Tacoma, about 30 miles (50 kilometers) south of Seattle, facedown with his hands and feet cuffed together behind him. The case became a touchstone for racial justice demonstrators in the Pacific Northwest.
“He was hog-tied by police. He pleaded he couldn’t breathe, and he died in the heart of our community,” Mena said.
The bill, which was previously passed by the Senate, will need to go back to that body for verification before heading to Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee’s desk.
Republican Rep. Gina Mosbrucker said while there were still concerns from her party about smaller jurisdictions that might not have the money to start using alternative restraints, she supports the measure.
“I feel like by this bill passing, for me Madam Speaker, we’re starting to amend that relationship between law enforcement and the community,” she said.
The U.S. Department of Justice has recommended against the practice since at least 1995 to avoid deaths in custody. The attorney general’s office in Washington recommended against using hog-tying in its model use-of-force policy released in 2022. At least four local agencies continue to permit it, according to policies they submitted to the attorney general’s office that year.
Ellis was walking home in March 2020 when he passed a patrol car with Tacoma police officers Matthew Collins and Christopher Burbank, who are white. There are conflicting accounts of what happened next, but Ellis was ultimately shocked, beaten and officers wrapped a hobble restraint device around his legs and linked it to his handcuffs behind his back, according to a probable cause statement filed by the Washington attorney general’s office.
A medical examiner ruled his death a homicide caused by lack of oxygen. Collins, Burbank and a third officer, Timothy Rankine, were charged with murder or manslaughter. Defense attorneys argued Ellis’ death was caused by methamphetamine intoxication and a heart condition, and a jury acquitted them in December.
veryGood! (243)
Related
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- What to know about the Maine mass shooting commission report
- 3 dead in Philadelphia suburbs shootings that prompted shelter-in-place orders
- Telehealth websites promise cure for male menopause despite FDA ban on off-label ads
- B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
- Biden to sign executive order aimed at advancing study of women’s health
- Walmart store closures: Three more reportedly added to list of shuttered stores in 2024
- First charter flight with US citizens fleeing Haiti lands in Miami
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- ‘I saw pure black’: A shotgun blast pulverized Amedy Dewey's face. What now?
Ranking
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Undeterred: Kansas Citians turn for St. Patrick’s Day parade, month after violence at Chiefs’ rally
- Keep Up With Rob Kardashian's Transformation Through the Years
- 3 separate shootings mar St. Patrick's Day festivities in Jacksonville Beach, Fla.
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- In images: New England’s ‘Town Meeting’ tradition gives people a direct role in local democracy
- Lamar Johnson: I am a freed man, an exonerated man and a blessed man
- This man turned a Boeing 727-200 into his house: See inside Oregon's Airplane Home
Recommendation
Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
South Carolina and Iowa top seeds in the women’s NCAA Tournament
Horoscopes Today, March 16, 2024
3 separate shootings mar St. Patrick's Day festivities in Jacksonville Beach, Fla.
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
‘I saw pure black’: A shotgun blast pulverized Amedy Dewey's face. What now?
Shop Amazon's Big Spring Sale Early Home Deals & Save Up to 77%, Including a $101 Area Rug for $40
One Way Back: Christine Blasey Ford on speaking out, death threats, and life after the Kavanaugh hearings