Family's lawsuit claims excessive force used by Amarillo Police: Shot & Tasered
Friday, April 22, 2005 at 10:00PM
TheSpook
The parents of a 33-year-old man who
died after Amarillo police shot him twice and shocked him multiple
times with a Taser in 2003 filed a federal civil lawsuit Monday,
alleging officers' excessive force contributed to their son's death.
The wrongful-death suit, filed in Amarillo's U.S. District Court, names
the city of Amarillo, Taser International Inc., Amarillo Police Sgt.
Phil Dean and five unknown police officers as defendants in the case.
The suit, filed by the parents of Corey Calvin Clark, focuses on the
April 16, 2003, case that led to Clark's death. According to police
reports, the confrontation between Clark and Amarillo police, who
wanted to arrest Clark in connection with a string of car thefts, began
when officers cornered Clark's van in an alley in the Bivins
neighborhood after he led police on a car chase. When officers ordered
Clark out of his car, he refused and appeared to be reaching behind the
seat for a weapon, police reports stated. The final autopsy report into
Clark's death said the weapon was a knife. Dean then shot at Clark, who
suffered two gunshot wounds, because he feared for his life, according
to Globe-News reports. Police also activated a Taser against Clark
multiple times during their attempt to place him into custody, the
autopsy report said. Clark was transported to Northwest Texas Hospital,
where he later died. According to the autopsy report, Clark died of
"acute cocaine intoxication due to chronic cocaine abuse." The civil
lawsuit alleges officers' actions in the incident were excessive,
unlawfully violent and deprived Clark of his life and liberty,
violating his Fourth Amendment rights. "I cannot understand why
(police) shot a person twice, and then practiced their Tasers on them,"
said attorney John Mann, who is representing Clark's parents.[more]
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