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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Death Of Man In Police Custody Is Ruled A Homicide By
Title:US CA: Death Of Man In Police Custody Is Ruled A Homicide By
Published On:2002-06-01
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2008-08-30 11:29:00
DEATH OF MAN IN POLICE CUSTODY IS RULED A HOMICIDE BY L.A. CORONER

The Los Angeles County Coroner's Office Has Ruled the Death of a Man in the
Custody of El Monte Police in October a Homicide.

Frank Tranquilino, 31, died Oct. 24 after police said he fought with
several officers, then lost consciousness after he had been handcuffed.

Tranquilino was walking in the 3300 block of Maxson Road when he attracted
the attention of police, who suspected he was carrying narcotics. He
sprinted down the street and climbed over several chain-link fences before
being grabbed by an officer, police said. At the time of Tranquilino's
death, El Monte's then-police chief, Bill Ankeny, said that police had used
a control hold to restrain the man.

Coroner's spokesman David Campbell said the office ruled that Tranquilino's
death resulted from the combined effects of neck compression and cocaine
and methamphetamine intoxication.

John Sweeney, a lawyer representing Tranquilino's 15-year-old son, Rudy,
said Wednesday that he believed the report suggested that a chokehold had
been used. An independent pathologist he had hired, he said, "concluded
that the death was due to asphyxia, probably a chokehold."

The coroner's report does not use the word chokehold to describe how the
Tranquilino was restrained.

"Clearly, the El Monte Police Department killed this man," Sweeney said.
"They denied it. It took the coroner's report to verify what we knew all
along. The family is very distraught, and this young man has to be raised
without his father. We are going to make sure that this young man is well
taken care of through compensation by the city of El Monte."

Pete Ferguson, an attorney representing El Monte, disagreed with that
assessment, pointing out that the coroner had found high levels of cocaine
and methamphetamines in Tranquilino's blood. "Minimal force was applied,"
Ferguson said. "If the guy didn't take drugs, he'd be alive today and would
be sitting in jail for assaulting and battering police officers."

The Police Department had no comment.

Lawyer Stephen Yagman filed suit in October on behalf of parents Sergio
Tranquilino and Rosemarie Richardson, seeking $20 million in general and
punitive damages, plus attorney's fees and injunctive relief, as well as an
additional $10 million under a Racketeering Influence and Corrupt
Organization claim.

Yagman was unavailable for comment Wednesday, but charged in October that
the El Monte police were lying about what happened in the incident.

"They said that, all of a sudden, he stopped breathing," Yagman said. "He
stopped breathing because they were choking him."
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