Pubdate: Thu, 24 Nov 2005 Source: Monterey County Herald (CA) Copyright: 2005 Monterey County Herald Contact: http://www.montereyherald.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/273 Author: Andre Briscoe, Herald Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) AUTOPSIES RELEASED IN TASER CASE Third Pathologist Called To Review Earlier Findings It took nearly a year and three pathologists to better pinpoint what killed a 40-year-old Salinas man who had been stunned several times with Tasers. With the release Wednesday of the three autopsy reports, the cause of Robert Clark Heston's death earlier this year came more into focus. Monterey County Sheriff Mike Kanalakis said the first two autopsies conflicted, making it "reasonable and necessary" to ask for a third report. "We are not experts. We needed someone to look into this who was," he said. Heston died Feb. 20, a day after Salinas police officers stunned him at least five times while trying to arrest him outside his parents' home. The District Attorney's Office found no evidence to support filing criminal charges against the officers, according to its report released Tuesday. The sole purpose of the district attorney's investigation was to determine whether any officer was criminally responsible for Heston's death. "The evidence in this case does not prove that any officer used unreasonable force at any time during the events on... February 19, 2005...," the report states. During the investigation, two other post-mortem reviews were requested. All three autopsy reports indicate Heston died from a combination of methamphetamine intoxication, Taser jolts and a heart attack. Two of the three reports cite multiple organ failure because of methamphetamine intoxication as the primary cause of death, with Taser use a contributing cause. The first autopsy was performed by Dr. Terri Haddix, the county coroner's forensic pathologist, two days after Heston died. Her findings indicate Heston died from organ failure because of a heart attack caused by Heston's drug use and the Taser jolts. Haddix's findings were never formally made public. Salinas Police Chief Daniel Ortega submitted Haddix's findings for review to Dr. John Hain, a pathologist who performs the majority of the county's autopsies. Hain determined Heston's cause of death as primarily cardiac arrest caused by methamphetamine intoxication. He said Heston was "severely agitated" and that he was under the influence of a toxic level of methamphetamine known to cause "life-ending cardiac arrhythmias." Hain stated in his report that a person who is under the influence of a drug such as cocaine or methamphetamine sometimes dies after a struggle with police because of added stress. Sheriff's officials were expected to disclose Hain's report in early August, but Kanalakis decided to send Hain's report and Haddix's report to Dr. Steven Karch, a retired San Francisco medical examiner considered an expert on drug-induced and Taser-related deaths. Karch found that Heston died primarily from chronic methamphetamine abuse and heart enlargement, and that he suffered from a condition known as "excited delirium," which is associated with chronic stimulant abuse and schizophrenia. Excited delirium is a condition that occurs when someone ingests large amounts of stimulant drugs. It has been reported as giving a person unusual strength and has been said to cause spontaneous cardiac or pulmonary arrest. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman