7 officers in Rochester, New York, suspended in case of death of Daniel Prude

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7 officers in Rochester, New York, suspended in case of death of Daniel Prude

Seven officers involved in the response to a call where a Black man was put in a hood and later died have been suspended, the mayor of Rochester, New York, announced Thursday.

Mayor Lovely Warren said at a news conference the officers involved in the response to Daniel Prude were suspended with pay “against the advice of counsel.”

“Mr. Daniel Prude was failed by our police department, our mental health care system, our society, and he was failed by me,” she said. “I must apologize to the Prude family and to all of our community.”

Warren indicated she might be in for a fight with the local police union over the suspensions.

“I have never shied away from taking action and holding our police, or anyone, who fails in their duties to our community accountable,” she said in a statement. “I understand that the union may sue me for taking these officers off our streets. They should feel free to do so.”

The officers had stopped Prude, who was nude at the time, after 3 a.m. on March 23, according to edited police body camera video obtained by his family and released to the media. Officers cuffed him, placed him on the wet street face down, put a spit hood on him, pushed his head into the asphalt and placed a knee on his back, the video appears to show.

The initial body camera video released earlier this week by the family spanned 11 minutes. On Thursday, a nearly 90 minute version of the video was shared by a lawyer for the family with NBC News. It’s not clear what exactly preceded it or how it was edited.

The new video appeared to show a Rochester police officer meeting with the man’s brother, Joe Prude, just after he asked for help with his brother because he left his residence.

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Joe Prude has said his brother was visiting from Chicago and suffered from mental illness. He said he called authorities the previous evening and that Prude was hospitalized briefly, but started acting out when he was released from a hospital after only about three hours.

On the body camera video released Thursday, Joe Prude said he feared that his brother might hurt himself or get hit by a train on tracks near his house. Daniel Prude was taking the drug PCP, according to his brother, and had been kicked off a train earlier that day in Buffalo because he was smoking onboard.

Daniel Prude asked his brother for a cigarette before suddenly dashing out the door in just a tank top and long underwear with no coat or shoes on that cold evening, the brother told an officer.

“He shot right out the door,” Joe Prude said.

Throughout the day, Joe Prude said, his brother was paranoid and fearful that someone was going to harm him.

“Why would I kill you?” Joe Prude said he told his brother. “‘You’re my little brother, why would I want to kill you, why would I kill you?'”

After he was stopped by police, Daniel Prude, 41, had told police he suffered from COVID-19, prompting officers to put the hood on his head, apparently to prevent him from spitting on them.

Prude went limp and appeared to stop breathing, according to the imagery and remarks from police and paramedics at the scene. He was hospitalized on life support and died seven days later, family and authorities said.

Monroe County Medical Examiner Nadia Granger concluded Prude died from “complications of asphyxia in the setting of physical restraint,” according to an autopsy case summary provided by the family’s lawyer.

She cited “acute phencyclidine intoxication,” or the effects of PCP, as a contributing factor.

Police Chief La’Ron Singletary said Wednesday he can’t comment on the cause of death because there are ongoing investigations — an internal inquiry and one by the state attorney general.

“We are working diligently to ensure a swift but thorough investigation,” New York Attorney General Letitia James said in a statement Wednesday.

The Rochester Police Locust Club, a union representing city officers, responded to the controversy Thursday.

“The Rochester Police Locust Club has concerns about the incident involving our members and Mr. Daniel Prude,” it said in a statement. “We are in the process of gathering all relevant information available to us, and we will issue a statement when that is completed.”

Image: Dennis RomeroDennis Romero

Dennis Romero writes for NBC News and is based in Los Angeles.

Image: David K. LiDavid K. Li

David K. Li is a breaking news reporter for NBC News.

Julmary Zambrano

contributed.

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