Phoenix Police Sued Over Death of Mentally Ill Man in Their Custody
Officers piled on top of a cuffed Akeem Terrell after he was arrested for acting erratically at a party, and later found him pulseless and facedown in an isolation cell.

Akeem Terrell had been behaving peculiarly at a party on New Year's Day in 2021, and did not cooperate with Phoenix, Arizona, police trying to arrest him after they ordered him to leave. He died in custody later that day.
Now surviving family members of Terrell's are suing Maricopa County Sheriff Paul Penzone, the county itself, the city of Phoenix, and various officers involved in causing Terrell's death. The suit was filed last week in federal court in Arizona, suing over various alleged constitutional rights violations, and seeking compensatory and punitive damages and court costs.
As the suit describes the events, Terrell at the party "was expressing paranoid thoughts and making statements that did not make sense." When Terrell did not leave as ordered, officers handcuffed and arrested him. Terrell was over six feet tall and weighed 433 pounds, so "Officers handcuffed his arms behind his back with two sets of handcuffs linked together. The handcuffs forced [Terrell's] hands behind his back in a strange, painful, and unnatural way."
While Terrell did not strike at the police or try to escape, he was uncooperative in the sense of going limp; so he was arrested for both trespassing and "passively resisting arrest."
The police shoved him "in a face-down position in the back of the SUV" and told the Maricopa County Jail they had a "combative prisoner." His lawyers describe him as more accurately at the time "a mentally ill man in the midst of a mental health crisis." His speech made it clear he didn't quite understand where he was, and yelled, "They're trying to kill me, they're trying to kill me" and "This is just a game. This is just a show."
Officers shoved Terrell into an isolation cell, where they "pulled [his] ankles and swept his legs out from under him causing him to fall into the wall and then the ground." With his hands behind his back, his "fall into the hard concrete was broken by his face and head."
Terrell was forced onto his stomach by four officers, even though "[p]lacing handcuffed people in a prone position creates an immediate risk of death or serious bodily injury. This is especially true for heavyset, obese, or barrel-chested people. This position is known to cause positional asphyxia." Officers "forcibly bent [Terrell's] legs backwards at the knee so that [his] heels were facing [his] buttocks" and an officer "placed his bodyweight on [his] back bent legs….placing [Terrell] in a 'hogtie' position that is known to compromise an individual's ability to breathe and to cause death and serious bodily injury."
More physical abuse of this man who did not leave a party when asked commenced, including knees on lower backs and other body parts, also making it harder for him to breath. His final words were "killing me, killing me." Officers "ignored [his] lack of movement and labored shallow breathing and continued to hold [Terrell] down in the forced hogtie position."
"When [Terrell's] body spasmed, the Officer Defendants took this as a sign of 'non-compliance' and applied additional pressure and bodyweight," the lawsuit charges.
They left him prone and face-down alone, seeking no medical attention for him. The officer "did not move [him] to the 'recovery position' (on his side) to lessen the risks of serious bodily injury or death that are created by being left in the prone position."
Officers came back to the face-down cuffed prisoner about 6 minutes later and found him with no pulse.
This was all, police said, so that they could re-cuff him with Maricopa handcuffs instead of the city of Phoenix ones he came in wearing. They re-cuffed him as well in front after turning over his pulseless body. About a half hour he was taken to a medical center and pronounced dead. As of this suit being filed last week, no officer had been disciplined for their role in Terrell's in-custody death.
The suit accuses the Phoenix police department of, in general, "Adopting a policy, custom, or practice of delaying and slowing down the release of information relating to incidents involving Officer uses of force in order to prevent the public and the victims of police violence from learning about the real facts involved in police uses of force" and "of 'purging' Officer discipline records so that Officers who are the subject of repeated complaints and investigations cannot be identified and the victims of police violence will have difficulty demonstrating the City of Phoenix's custom, pattern, and practice of using excessive force" and having a "practice of failing to fully investigate incidents involving Officer uses of force and in-custody deaths."
The suit lists at least five other specific cases of handcuffed, face-down people in police custody in Phoenix dying.
The misdeeds of Phoenix's police department, which is currently under federal Justice Department investigation, are all too frequently reported here at Reason. The national Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that in fiscal year 2020 there were, in federal custody alone, "65 arrest-related deaths and 614 deaths in custody." The Marshall Project collates numerous reports on deaths in police custody from across the nation.
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Ok I'm not here to defend the cops on this one but. First a couple details might help the reader understand the circumstances a little better. Why were the cops there? Was this guy known to the property owner or did he wander in off the street? If a 400 lb. man walked into a party I was hosting talking crazy shit I'm pretty sure I'd want him removed and there is no way I could accomplish that by myself. He was offered the opportunity to leave but refused and was ultimately charged with trespassing. If the property owner makes a trespassing complaint and the trespasser refuses to leave the cops are going to have to remove him involuntarily. That's actually their job. While he reportedly was not violent he went limp to prevent the cops from evicting him. Again a limp 400 lb. man is obviously going to require some serious manhandling to remove. Obviously he should not have been left face down and obviously the cops should have know that. But this isn't exactly the crime of the century.
I'm not here to defend the cops on this one either but... while Mrs. Casual doesn't weigh 400 lbs., if someone lying face down with another person on top of them for 6 min. were guaranteed to cause asphyxiation, Mrs. Casual would've died like 4 times in the last week.
Were you hogtied as well?
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Just because you have fantasies about being hogtied doesn't mean everyone else does.
The guy who died was, though it doesn't appear to be of his own will. Seems like the only people acting on said fantasies are the cops.
The guy who died was
The guy who died was not, according to the facts, hogtied. The notion that he was is a fantasy.
I know consistent linear thought and reading comprehension isn't your strong suit, but when you say "There are those who believe the Constitution matters, and those who figure the guy had it coming. Which one are you?"
Are you judging who was actually hogtied based on the facts as you know them or on an unconstitutional presumption of such?
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Combative druggie is difficult to handle. What does Reason think cops should do here. What is their perfect execution of an arrest in this instance? His size makes him a threat to almost any cop. He was behaving not only erratically but also combative. There is no perfect solution.
If they do nothing and he hurts someone, cops would be blamed.
If he flees and jumps off a 2nd story in his drug paranoia, cops would be blamed.
The cops could try not using techniques and tactics that are known to be disproportionately dangerous. They could try not doing things that are likely to provoke resistance, not because the subject is trying to escape or injure them, but just because they're in pain or struggling to breathe. Or, call me crazy, but maybe they could stop applying force to people who have clearly stopped resisting. Or breathing.
Such as? Asking for specifics. How do you bring down a 400 lb combative person. What techniques?
Cite on cops provoking resistance?
I think this is the part that shouldn't have happened:
Officers shoved Terrell into an isolation cell, where they "pulled [his] ankles and swept his legs out from under him causing him to fall into the wall and then the ground." With his hands behind his back, his "fall into the hard concrete was broken by his face and head."
TL,DR: Video evidence or Reason’s full of shit and even with video, the “provoking resistance” comment is a rather large load of bullshit.
We can agree that the part where he died shouldn’t have happened, but that part of the narrative, especially given Reason’s consistently slanted and shitty reporting on such situations, could not have felt more like it was lifted straight out of Karate Kid to me.
The dude’s 400+ lbs., unless several officers all pulled his ankles at the same time they didn’t “sweep his legs out from under him“, they tipped him over. Certainly not gently, and he may’ve hit the wall with his face rather than with his shoulders, but the notion that they swept his legs out from under him and he landed on his head is not believable by anyone who’s even watched football, UFC fights, wrestling, martial arts, or gymnastics on TV, let alone participated in such competitions.
And the provoking resistance comment is bullshit even without evidence. The whole reason the cops were involved in the first place was because of his mental condition, unprovoked agitation being the rather critical and specific feature. If the hosts could’ve gotten him to leave the party without unprovoked resistance, the cops wouldn’t have been called. If the cops had been able to get him to leave the party without unprovoked resistance, as indicated in the story, they wouldn’t necessarily have had to arrest him. The unprovoked resistance bullshit is, without law enforcement involved, like saying it’s not really assault until I’ve punched you the *third* time.
It is also the job of the police to keep people alive while in their custody.
There are two kinds of people in this world when it comes to cops: There are those who believe the Constitution matters, and those who figure the guy had it coming.
Which one are you?
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And to think that Doherty was once given the Szasz award. Renounce it, Brian, so you can write shit like this with a clean conscience. Szasz deserves better.
Doherty on Szasz in 2012:
https://reason.com/2023/01/04/phoenix-police-sued-over-death-of-mentally-ill-man-in-their-custody/?comments=true#comment-9861835
There are no similar cases where a man weighing between 415 and 445lbs died like this so QI...
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I suppose it would have been the best decision for the cops involved to just tell the complainant that it is just too risky to try to take such a person into custody, and that they are on their own.
When enough of these lawsuits have been filed, the cops will need to start making such decisions. Perhaps they could add a "decline to intervene" code for the reports officers file on their callouts.
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Just get a couple of unarmed, 150 lb. mental health professionals to de-escalate the situation at whatever the pace the 400 lb. dude who's having a paranoid break is capable of adjusting to the idea of leaving the property that isn't his.
Somewhat on-topic:
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Akeem Terrell died in police custody in Phoenix, Arizona on New Year's Day in 2021 after being arrested for trespassing and passively resisting arrest at a party. His family is suing the Maricopa County Sheriff, the city of Phoenix, and various officers involved in the incident for alleged constitutional rights violations, seeking compensatory and punitive damages. The suit describes officers using excessive force on Terrell, who was expressing paranoid thoughts and making strange statements, and ignoring his lack of movement and labored breathing while in a hogtie position. The suit also accuses the Phoenix police department of generally delaying the release of information on incidents involving officer use of force. No officers have been disciplined in relation to Terrell's death.
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Brian could simply face the fact that Arizona Kleptocracy voters specifically hire cops to murder people by initiation of deadly force. Their fine example is clearly popular nationwide, as shown by the way Epstein and McAfee turned up dead in jails paid for by "our" Kleptocracy. This is what happens when voters are brainwashed into flipping back and forth between two coercive factions.
If those alleged facts are proven, better hope for an OJ type jury that favors cops over criminals. You're an idiot if you think you can handle 433 pounds without bringing in medical assistance. It's not like he was going to run away or was a danger to anyone...
an OJ type jury that favors cops over criminals
WWII started after Hitler bombed Pearl Harbor in your reality didn't it?
Except for the unfortunate death this all reads like a night in the backroom of a BDSM gay bar.
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