Man Suffers Heart Attack, Dies, After Being Cuffed For Cussing at Officer and Trying to Shut his Door
Cops in Caddo Parish, Louisiana, were searching for a theft suspect on the property who was not there when they arrested William Walls and caused his death.

Getting annoyed with police who had already searched and failed to find a theft suspect on his property led an innocent 68-year-old man to be cuffed and shoved in the back of a police car in March 2021, where he had a heart attack and later died at a hospital. The officers did attempt some basic CPR when they found him without an apparent pulse slumped over in the back of their car where they'd stored him.
Two sons of William Walls are suing the Caddo Parish Sheriff's Office in Louisiana (and two specific deputies) under 42 U.S. Code §1983, which holds government agencies and agents liable for "the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution." That wrongful death lawsuit was shifted from state to federal court this week. An officer involved, Deputy Ryan Chapman, is also facing criminal charges for his role in Walls' death.
The officer had no warrant to enter Walls' specific residence, nor reasonable probable cause to have cuffed him and put him in the police car where he suffered his heart attack.
As can be seen in officer bodycam footage featured in a news segment on local TV news channel KTBS, Walls at first willingly allowed the police to search his mobile home to look for a theft suspect who had indeed spent the night on the larger property the night before in one of Walls' son's mobile homes. But the suspect was no longer on the property when the search that led to Walls' death happened.
Walls became annoyed the officers were still nosing around the larger property and came out of his mobile home offering them a phone, apparently so they could talk to one of his sons about the fugitive, and said they could then "get the fuck out of here."
As seen in the video, Walls was walking back into his own mobile home, doing nothing to obstruct the officers besides having asked them to leave, when they followed him in, pushed him against a bit of furniture, and cuffed him in his own home—his invitation for them to enter obviously rescinded by then.
At the time, as seen in the video, the reasons for Walls being cuffed and dragged out of his home were expressed by Chapman as "cuss[ing]" at him and "slam[ming a] door in his face." (As the video shows, Walls did not succeed in even shutting the door, which an officer had his hand on as he tried.) Given that they'd already searched the home, neither offense can be reasonably seen as criminal obstruction.
"I have not obstructed justice, sir," spoken quietly, were among Walls' last words.
While the officers insist he was a threat to their safety, that is not a conclusion a reasonable non-cop is likely to glean from the footage. Although an internal investigation (surprise) exonerated the officers, the Caddo Parish district attorney's office sent the case to a grand jury, where Chapman was indicted.
The indictment states Chapman faces "one count of malfeasance in office stemming from a March 18, 2021, in-custody death. The charge is a felony that carries up to five years with or without hard labor and a possible fine of up to $5,000."
In part of their lawsuit, the family stated "William E. Walls was a senior citizen who spent his entire life as a law-abiding citizen, and was trying to cooperate with law enforcement – until Deputy Chapman began acting unreasonably."
As always, and terrifyingly, even being completely innocent can be meaningless once a police officer crosses your path. The police's own procedures and investigatory powers seldom prevent or even punish unreasonable police behavior that causes harm and death.
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cardiac. arrest.
Oh dear. If that doesn't bring back chumbly, nothing will.
Have a heart attack and die like a thug, get cuffed like a thug.
This highlights a much bigger issue. If the guy had not had a heart attack and died, it is very likely no one would have ever heard about the police's antics.
The explosive and volatile police actions which result in things like death or the total destruction of a person's house bring in the media, giving avenue to the the "cause" folks to all rush in, stir things up, and get even more press.
But cops shooting people and people dying in custody are not really the big issue. It is the constant and low(er) level violations of rights which comes from many cop's sense of moral superiority and right to entitlement which largely go unnoticed by the population. It is the almost total lack of accountability that departments and unions have built into the system which allows, and at times even encourages, rights violations by their employees.
I was with a buddy once at a stop sign. After he stopped, he began to go and a cop on a bicycle, who was illegally riding on the sidewalk, ran the stop sign and rode right in front of us across the intersection. Our movement spooked him, he nearly fell of his bike, and squared up to our car, slapped on the hood and drew his pistol, pointing it straight at my buddy. He got out of the car (hands raised) and was yelled at and berated by the officer. As bad as that was, it was even worse when he decided to mouth off to the officer (something about "not hearing the officer yelling [made a fake siren sound]"), who then slammed him roughly up against the hood hard enough to bruise. Afterward, he looked into complaining about the cop, but after speaking with a couple of lawyers and advocates about the behavior decided it was pointless. Everyone pretty much agreed: nothing was going to happen. That is a problem.
You can still file a complaint.
You will respect my authority!
It certainly seems that an awful lot of cops harbor an inner Cartman.
And there is no chance in hell he'll get the Floyd or Blake treatment when he is 1000000 times as worthy.
I doubt even the boot licking faggots (police union shills) will be around to defend this one.
Police union dues get paid? Nothing to see here then; move along.
Should be manslaughter.
Fragile skull doctrine. If you caused his heart attack due to excess duress, through criminal and negligent behavior it is manslaughter. Doesn't matter how fragile the man is.
Bullshit, you willing to make work places liable for employees who have heart attacks, ex-husbands and wives liable when the divorce proceedings push their ex-partners stress levels over the edge to heart attack, how about make those people on the internet liable for having the dare to argue with someone until the other person's blood pressure spikes.
If you were trying to find the most stupid presentment that will cause the most human suffering possible, you'd be hard pressed to find a better one than holding other people responsible for stress induced heart attacks.
Precedent
Illocust, maybe you missed the Captain's part about "criminal and negligent behavior".
Raising my blood pressure on the Internet, like you just did, is fine. Doing it during an illegal armed trespass to conduct an illegal warrantless search followed up by an illegal detention? You need to be 100% liable for every consequence of your crime.
No, it should be felony murder: Walls died as a result of felony malfeasance in office.
Looter politicians hire these thugs to bully girls, shoot hippies and blacks and act as Kleptocracy bodyguards--not to protect the rights of individuals per objectively-defined laws. Government teevee tells voters there are only two choices, both of them fascist. Surprise?
Hey, uhm, I think this is Trumps fault.
"that is not a conclusion a reasonable non-cop is likely to glean from the footage"
Cops aren't reasonable.
Reasonable non-cop. Some non-cops are reasonable, others aren't.
It boggles the mind trying to calculate the number of cases like this that were never filmed and for which there can be no 'justice' or accountability.
Another case of failure to grovel.
Mr. Walls was arrested for "contempt of cop." In this case, and many other cases, it ended up being a capital offense.
Why isn't this a 'local story'?
This kind of thing is being done, on a huge scale, to much of the country--if not the world, and Reason refuses to talk about it unless it can find a way to obliquely praise it, but we keep getting these idiot stories--I'm assuming it done to try to camoflage the 'libertarian' embrace of authoritarian leftism so often on display here
The police tend to occupy the left-side of the IQ distribution. Average IQ for a patrol cop is 90-100. So I never expect the average fuzzaroonie to make stellar decisions.
You can likely add the bootlickers into this side of the scale as well.
White guy, per the video. No big deal.
He was NOT legally required to allow access to his home, unless there was a warrant or probable cause. If the police put a foot in the door and forced their way in, he could have said over and over: “I do NOT AUTHORIZE you to enter my home without a warrant or probable cause.” Just say it over and over, and nothing else. Do NOT attempt to stop them.
Never allow the police in your home without a warrant, and never allow a search. Ever
Sanjosemike (no longer in CA)
Well, then REASON should be happy with all those cities and states which are de-funding the police, ending cash bail and releasing felons back into the community. Fewer people being hassled by cops, you know. And if this means higher rates of violent and property crime, that's a small price to pay.
By the way, what is REASON's plan to deal with the rising tide of crime in America? Have cops read the NAP?
Here in these comments dozens of delusional Trumpanzees have sworn that if a cop kneels on a black gentleman's throat for a quarter of an hour, the death was from a drug overdose... remember? Nothing can convince mystical bigots of facts of reality once they've made up their mind to worship a girl-bullying Fuhrer who loves the initiation of deadly force by First Responders™ whatever the pretext. Pity the jurors and voters believed their own eyes... he he he...
During Republican Bert Hoover's Administration, there was a sharply accelerating increase in the number of narcs, snitches, agents, snoops and government-funded "buyers" of felony beer shot to death. But prosecutor Willebrandt had gotten a judgment forcing sumptuary enforcers to snitch, arrest and testify against each other. The only way out was for Dems to adopt the Liberal Party repeal plank and get rid of the Gee-Oh-Pee from 1932 to 1952.
Five to one the killer gets qualified immunity. Lysander Spooner explained the procedure if the cop drops dead.
"If, in defending his property, he should kill any of our band who are assisting you, capture him at all hazards; charge him (in one of our courts) with murder, convict him, and hang him. If he should call upon his neighbors, or any others who, like him, may be disposed to resist our demands, and they should come in large numbers to his assistance, cry out that they are all rebels and traitors; that "our country" is in danger; call upon the commander of our hired murderers; tell him to quell the rebellion and "save the country," cost what it may. Tell him to kill all who resist, though they should be hundreds of thousands, and thus strike terror into all others similarly disposed." No exaggeration there, in 1868 or 2022.
Guy wasn't on the right statins. Need the ones that protect from handcuffs.
Didn't get his booster shot.