Pubdate: Mon, 28 Nov 2011 Source: Denver Post (CO) Copyright: 2011 The Denver Post Corp Contact: http://www.denverpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/122 Author: Felisa Cardona Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/raids.htm (Drug Raids) JEFFERSON COUNTY DEPUTIES CLEARED IN DRUG USER'S DEATH Russell Arnold Jr.'s eyes were bulging, and he was sweating and speaking gibberish. So his girlfriend, Jayme Hammond, called 911 and told a Jefferson County sheriff's dispatcher she was afraid and also concerned for his safety. "My boyfriend is high on something," Hammond said. "He is acting crazy." About 20 minutes after that call for help, Arnold was dead. Four Jefferson County sheriff's deputies fought with Arnold when they got to his apartment and used a Taser on him, but an autopsy determined Arnold, 34, didn't die from the struggle. He died from complications of methamphetamine toxicity. But Arnold's mother, Kathleen, said she thinks excessive force was used in the June incident. She hasn't decided whether to sue the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office. "The 911 call indicates he needs medical help. At what point did they decide he did not need medical help?" she said. "Why do you electrocute someone who is in that kind of a mental state?" Jefferson County sheriff's spokesman Mark Techmeyer said the case is tragic but deputies didn't do anything wrong. "When we go on a domestic-violence call, the last thing we think in our mind is that someone is going to die," he said. "It is not the ending we hoped for when we went out there." Documents about the circumstances regarding Arnold's death, including interviews with Hammond, deputies and paramedics at the scene, were recently released to The Denver Post by the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office. The Sheriff's Office asked Lakewood police detectives to independently investigate Arnold's death. Last week, District Attorney Scott Storey officially cleared the deputies of wrongdoing. "Based on all the relevant factors, it is my conclusion that . . . deputies used reasonable and appropriate force in attempts to subdue a combative Mr. Arnold," Storey wrote. "The death of Mr. Arnold is tragic, but it is not the result of the actions of members of the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office. It is my conclusion the . . . deputies did not violate any provisions of Colorado's Criminal Code." The incident began about 4 a.m. June 7, when Arnold wouldn't let Hammond sleep. He kept picking her up like a baby, and she realized his behavior meant he had relapsed on methamphetamine after two years of sobriety, records show. When deputies arrived, they encountered an out-of-control Arnold who didn't want to comply with their commands, records of interviews with the deputies say. Sgt. Charlie Simmons attempted to subdue Arnold with a Taser using a "drive stun" method into his thigh. When Arnold didn't react to the device, Simmons began punching him in the face. Finally, deputies managed to handcuff Arnold and attach a hobble device to his legs. They called an ambulance to treat his injuries from the fight. Paramedics told investigators that Arnold continued to resist in the ambulance. They gave him two shots of Versed, a sedative, to calm him down. Arnold went limp in the ambulance and stopped breathing. The paramedics tried to revive him to no avail. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom