What is a "Blood choke"?
If you're talking about collapsing the carotid arteries, performing a lateral vascular neck restraint ... Chuck Haggard is the SME on that ... if applied correctly, it should be effective in seconds, not minutes. If it's effective, you move to cuffing; if it isn't, like before the 30-second mark, either re-position your arm or try something else. That's not at all what was depicted in the video. The officer didn't appear to be doing anything along those lines.
“Remember, being healthy is basically just dying as slowly as possible,” Ricky Gervais
Calling it a choke implies that the airflow is cut off and its a prelude to strangulation. The carotid restraint, LVNR, etc only impacts blood flow. So, it isn't a choke. I get the common use aspect but this is one of those times where words have meaning in police use of force world. Far too many agencies have lost the ability to use the carotid restraint because of drama & flawed perceptions - misuse of language plays a part in that.
Y’all know I’m not a cop, and not in my lane, so to speak. That said, I had a second row seat to watching a long-time career cop with a good work reputation lose both his job AND his freedom over an excited delirium death in custody. Hemmed the guy up big time; biiiiiig news in my neck of the woods. I know his attorney well enough to know that it was a tragedy on all sides, all around; no winners. The officer actually went to prison over excessive force charges not relating to the death, but no doubt things would have looked better if the subject hadn’t of died while in restraints lying on his stomach.
That's because it's what the media puts in front of you vs what they don't and how that alters your perception. If sumdood gets doped up, runs around naked, then locks himself in his car and dies all by himself it's just reported as an overdose death and the media doesn't report it because nobody gives a shit about overdoses. It's a statistic, not a story, unless his toddler was in the backseat or something. I've had sumdood down and out from fighting the air, or whatever his hallucinations were most likely, when I got there. Get police involvement, though, now it's controversial and sexy. Same as the heart-string-tugging little kid in the backseat. It gets eyeballs so it's news.
For Excited Delirium itself, how it was explained to me: In the same way adrenaline can let you overcome your body's natural resistance to self-injury by overtaxing your muscles (letting you exceed your normal strength but at the cost of damage to your muscles), certain drugs do the same thing. You overtax yourself through exertion to the point your muscles get too tired/damaged to keep going, your diaphragm stops, your heart stops, whatever. Ordinarily we pass out before we can do that much damage to ourselves. The drugs override that.
Sorta around sometimes for some of your shitty mod needs.
What he was being investigated for has absolutely nothing to do with his behavior leading up to being arrested, or the amount of violence he used in resisting. Maybe you're in a sheltered part of the country, but in the cities, it's pretty common for dumbshits to successfully escalate "hey, stop walking in the middle of the street, get on the sidewalk" up to resisting arrest and assault on an officer. They're not high, drunk, or crazy, they're just dumbshits.
BONUS ROUND FOR LE: Why are you walking in the middle of the street?
Spoiler (highlight to read):
A: Because you want me to walk on the sidewalk, motherfucker!
I am the owner of Agile/Training and Consulting
www.agiletactical.com
I am the owner of Agile/Training and Consulting
www.agiletactical.com