Family of LA DUI suspect Edward Bronstein, 38, who died after screaming ‘I can’t breathe’ 11 times, insist DA file criminal charges against the officers who pinned him face-down: Nine cops named in alleged ‘callous disregard for human life’ act
‘My dad was a good person. He was treated like trash’ – Edward Bronstein‘s daughter Palomino
Family of DUI suspect who Edward Bronstein, died during police arrest after screaming ‘I can’t breathe’ 11 times
His family want the Los Angeles DA to file criminal charges against the officers who pinned him face-down, as seen in horrifying video
Bronstein, 38, died March 31, 2020 in Pasadena less than two months before George Floyd died in Minneapolis
Footage of his final moments was released by LA police on Wednesday after his family sued to see the harrowing video
The father-of-two was pulled over for suspicion of drunk driving and police were forcing him to draw blood with a needle for a sobriety test
He resisted because he was terrified of needles, his family has said
Video shows Bronstein being forced onto a mat in the police station’s garage while handcuffed then five officer kneel on his back as they extract blood
He screams ‘I can’t breathe’ 11 times before he eventually falls silent, cops draw blood from the limp body before turning him over and attempting resuscitation
He was dead
Palomino said her father ‘was treated like trash’ and did not deserve to die the way he did
His family sued for excessive use of force and violation of his civil rights
The California Highway Patrol fought the release of the video tape, but a federal judge ordered them to do so
Officers involved with the arrest include Carlos Villanueva, Christopher Sanchez-Romero, Darren Parsons, Diego Romero, Dusty Osmanson, Eric Voss, Justin Silva, Dionisio Fiorella and Marciel Terry
The eight officers are named along with Sergeant Michael Little
Criminal justice experts say the tape shows a callous disregard for human life

The daughter of a man who died while in the custody of the California Highway Patrol after screaming nearly a dozen times ‘I can’t breathe’ says the officers seen in a newly released police video pinning down her dad to draw his blood treated him ‘like trash.’
The family of Edward Bronstein have filed a lawsuit related to his death on March 31, 2020, and have demanded that the CHP officers who took part in the arrest on suspicion of driving under the influence be criminally charged in connection with his death.
Bronstein, a 38-year-old father of two, died while in police custody two months before George Floyd, an unarmed black man, was murdered by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, who was filmed kneeling on his neck for more than 8 minutes, as he, too, repeatedly told officers ‘I can’t breathe.’
On Wednesday, Bronstein’s daughter Brianna Palomino and her attorney, Michael Carillo, held a press conference following the court-ordered release of a harrowing 18-minute video capturing her father’s final moments.
‘My dad was a good person,’ Palomino said, according to NBC4. ‘Nobody deserves to die this way. He was treated like trash, like his life was not deserving.’
Palomino wants the officers who participated in the fatal arrest held accountable for their actions.

Final moments show DUI suspect who died screaming ‘I can’t breathe’
‘His screams, his face, them slapping him around, it will live in my head forever and there’s nothing more than justice and these officers paying for what they did,’ Palomino added, referring to the graphic content of the police footage. ‘I wish my dad was here, every day, and there’s nothing that will take that away.’ Carillo, the family’s attorney, slammed the officers in the video for ignoring his desperate cries and allegedly failing to render aid.
‘He’s lifeless, he’s dead,’ Carillo said, adding ‘He’s cold, he’s blue and instead of trying to save his life, they slap him in the face, thinking that’s going to wake a dead man up.’
Bronstein was pulled over for a suspected DUI, but taken to a police station after refusing to give a blood sample, which his family says was due to a fear of needles.
Bronstein began wailing with fear after being pinned to the ground face-down shortly afterwards and later died, with efforts to revive him proving unsuccessful.
The California Highway Patrol had fought to keep the police video of the Bronstein’s arrest from going public after his family sued over excessive use of force and civil rights violations, but a federal court judge ordered it released on Tuesday.
Edward Bronstein, 38, died on March 31, 2020, less than two months before George Floyd was killed by police in Minnesota after repeatedly telling officers ‘I can’t breathe’
An 18-minute video of the arrest, taken by a California Highway Patrol sergeant in Pasadena, shows a handcuffed Bronstein, a father to two daughters, arguing with police as the lead him to a mat on the floor of the Altadena station garage and forcing him to his knees to take a blood sample he’d refused to give.

He initially argues, but begins screaming with fear after being flung to the ground face down.
‘I’ll do it willingly,’ Bronstein can be heard saying as two officers hover over him and a man can be heard warning him not to resist taking a court ordered blood sample to determine his intoxication level.
‘You can just provide it and still say you don’t consent,’ the officer tells him as he continues to protest his treatment. ‘You’re the one bringing the fight, not us.’
‘I’m not fighting at all,’ Bronstein says as an officer keeps his hand on his shoulder.
‘Then have a seat and provide you arm. This is your last opportunity,’ the patrolman said. ‘Otherwise you’re going to go face down on the map and we’re going to keep on going.’
Bronstein’s family said that he had a fear of needles.
Officers swarm Bronstein and pull his legs out from under him, causing him to squirm on the ground.
Five officers can be seen kneeling on him as he screams ‘I’ll do it willingly, I’ll do it willingly.’
‘Too late,’ the officer says. ‘We’re not even poking you yet. You need to relax.’
Then Bronstein says, ‘I can’t breathe, I can’t breathe.’

Eventually, he stops moving and officers draw blood from his limp body.
A second video, more than 12 minutes long, shows the officers’ and paramedics’ unsuccessful attempts to revive Bronstein. They can be seen slapping him in the head and calling his name.
They turn him over and start giving him CPR and oxygen, but did not recover.
One officer tells the paramedics that Bronstein had been complaining of ‘shortness of breath.’
‘When we rolled him back over, he was turning blue,’ he said.
Soon after, someone reminds the group: ‘Everybody’s on camera.’
The LA County coroner’s office ruled Bronstein’s cause of death as ‘acute methamphetamine intoxication during restraint by law enforcement.’ A copy of the autopsy report was not immediately available.

The family is calling for the officers to be criminally charged by the Los Angeles County district attorney. The LA County District Attorney’s Office said ‘the matter remains under review.’
‘When the nation was in an uproar over the George Floyd tragedy, we had no idea this had also happened to Mr. Bronstein,’ said Luis Carrillo, an attorney for Bronstein’s family.
‘In my view the officers demonstrated a callous disregard for the value of human life and their actions should be investigated as potentially being criminal conduct,’ Bowling Green State University criminal justice professor Philip Stinson told the Associated Press.
The state attorney general’s office is representing the highway patrol and the officers in the federal lawsuit.
A 2021 law signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom makes it illegal for police to restrain suspects face-down because the maneuver has lead to multiple unintended deaths. Inspired by George Floyd’s death it, was passed after Bronstein died.

Stinson said the dangers are well known, but in this case the officers had a mat prepared, making it seem ‘like this was a routine occurrence for the officers, that they would take someone to the mat face down to gain compliance in order to get what they want.’
Moreover, their comments on camera seemed to indicate that they were of a mind ‘to teach somebody a lesson: ‘Well, if you’re not going to comply with what we want you to do, we’re going to do this the hard way and it’s going to be painful for you,’ said Stinson, who reviewed the video at the request of The Associated Press.
Since 2010 at least 140 people have died in police custody from restraint induced asphyxia, with many apparently not even able to express difficulty breathing, according to a review of Fatal Encounters, a searchable database of people who died while interacting with police.
Before Floyd, Eric Garner died in 2014 during an arrest in which he also complained of not being able to breathe. It was found that the officers used a banned chokehold to subdue him. His death, in part, launched the Black Lives Matter movement.

Back on October 1, 2017, in Columbus, Georgia, a 300-pound police officer sat on Hector Arreola’s back while another held a knee to his neck and kept him face down outside his neighbor’s house for six minutes until he stopped moving and later died.
Like Floyd and Garner, Hector Arreola in a futile bid for survival told the heavy men on top of him, “I can’t breathe.”
Finally, Stinson said, ‘It seemed that they were treating the incident as if the man was pretending to be unconscious. It did not seem to register with the officers that there was a medical emergency for many, many minutes.’
Family members say Bronstein was terrified of needles and believe that’s why he was reluctant to comply with the CHP initially as they tried to take a blood sample. In the video, an officer tells Bronstein they have a court order — an assertion that Carrillo doubts was true.

The coroner found Bronstein “died of acute methamphetamine intoxication during restraint by law enforcement.” However, it’s unclear whether there was any investigation or finding of misconduct for any of the officers involved.
The officers acted in a way that the public will no longer tolerate, said Eugene O’Donnell, a professor of police studies at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
‘This is just an utterly explosive potential situation,’ said O’Donnell, who also reviewed the video at the AP’s request. ‘If they’re not compliant, no longer can the police be having these wrestling matches with people because the consequences are deemed to far out-risk any benefit.’
The lawsuit names nine officers and one sergeant.
The officers are Carlos Villanueva, Christopher Sanchez-Romero, Darren Parsons, Diego Romero, Dusty Osmanson, Eric Voss, Justin Silva, Dionisio Fiorella and Marciel Terry. The eight officers are named along with Sergeant Michael Little.
An attorney for the medical professional said the firm that employs him was ‘heartbroken’ to learn of the death.
Attorney John C. Kelly said in a statement that the company does not participate in the arrest or physical handling of anyone, and just takes blood samples for testing. They are not there to provide medical clearance or evaluation, and most do not have that training.
That was true in this case, he wrote, and when Bronstein became unresponsive, the company’s employee ‘provided what help he could under the circumstances.’
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