$500,000 is offered to family in pepper-spray death of Black Teen by Fort Lauderdale Police
- Originally published in the Sun-Sentinel (Fort Lauderdale, FL) December 16, 2004 Thursday Broward Metro Edition
- After Spraying Black Teen Police Refused to Give Medical Help
By Brittany Wallman Staff Writer
The city tentatively has reached a $500,000 settlement with the family
of Raymond Sterling Jr., a young black man whose run from police after
a routine traffic stop last year led to his death.
Sterling's
death in police custody set off public controversy about the use of
pepper spray and the city's actions and inactions leading up to his
final moments.
An internal memo to elected
officials Wednesday outlined the terms of the settlement, which would
put to rest, for half a million dollars, a lawsuit Sterling's family
filed against the city for wrongful death and civil rights claims.
Sterling, 21, died in April 2003.
Sterling,
who was driving with a suspended license, ran from police. When he was
caught and refused to get in the squad car, he was pepper-sprayed.
Sterling began showing signs of distress and died soon after. Neither
police nor paramedics took Sterling to a hospital or tried to revive
him.
The medical examiner ruled that
Sterling died as a result of sickle cell trait, the pepper spray,
exhaustion from the chase and asthma. Sterling's red blood cells
sickled, or bent, robbing him of oxygen.
In
the aftermath, the Police Department issued a new policy governing the
use of pepper spray. The crux of the public criticism rested, though,
on what fire and police officials didn't do -- try to save him.
The
four firefighter-paramedics involved were fired, but two of them won
their jobs back this month. All the police officers involved were
cleared.
The city was faced with having to
hire lawyers to defend all the firefighters and officers in court.
Though the city has a sovereign immunity cap of $200,000 for part of
the legal claim, there is no cap on what the city could pay out on
civil rights litigation.
"Due to the
nature of the claims," City Attorney Harry Stewart wrote in a memo to
elected officials, the city manager and city clerk Wednesday, "and
particularly in light of the costs of defense for the city and all the
individuals involved in this case, it is recommended that the
Commission approve the payment."
Commissioners
discussed the lawsuit last week in a closed-door session. Stewart's
memo says the $500,000 figure was the result of negotiations.
Sterling's
father, Raymond Sterling Sr., said Wednesday that he hadn't been told
by his attorney, Willie Gary, about the settlement offer. The
settlement isn't final until city commissioners vote on it Tuesday and
Sterling Sr. signs off on it.
He would
rather not settle at all, he said. But that would be reckless, he said,
a risk too great to take. Raymond Jr. left behind a toddler, Raymond
Deshon Sterling, 2.
"You could wind up
with nothing," Sterling Sr. said. "So when you look at that and you
look at his son and him not having a father and taking a chance on him
getting nothing or having money for his college, it's risky. It's a
chance that I don't think is wise to take."
Sterling Sr., 41, a Tamarac resident, said he was helping raise his grandson.
"You could say I'm his father now," said Sterling Sr., who was 17 when Sterling Jr. was born.
The toddler doesn't ask for his father as often as he used to, Sterling Sr. said.
"But if you show him a picture, he knows who that is."
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