Published: 20:42 EST, 20 July 2015 | Updated: 01:52 EST, 21 July 2015
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A Mississippi father died at the hospital on Saturday night hours after being taken into custody by police during an incident that may have involved excessive force and a hogtie that proved fatal.
Troy Goode's wife Kelli was driving them back from a Widespread Panic concert at Snowden Grove Amphitheater when she pulled over around 7.45pm because of her husband's 'erratic' behavior.
When Southaven Police arrived, they observed the 30-year-old chemical engineer 'running from the area acting strange and not cooperative' and learned he 'had allegedly taken some LSD'.
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Troy Goode (seen with wife Kelli and 15-month-old son Ryan) died after an encounter with Mississippi police
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In a video, Goode can be seen 'hogtied' on a stretcher on his stomach with his arm and legs restrained
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Goode was 'restrained by officers and transferred to an awaiting ambulance to be transported to the hospital'
Police said they 'attempted to detain the subject who began to resist' before Goode 'was eventually restrained by officers and transferred to an awaiting ambulance to be transported to the hospital'.
Goode, who was asthmatic and had a 15-month-old son named Ryan, died at Baptist Memorial Hospital-DeSoto a few hours later due to an unknown cause of death, Local Memphis reported.
Investigators are awaiting the results of an autopsy and toxicology report, but witnesses and the family's attorney have indicated that the way police restrained Goode may have led to his death.
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The asthmatic dad died at Baptist Memorial Hospital
Attorney Tim Edwards, who is with Ballin, Ballin & Fishman, said that witnesses heard Goode screaming that he couldn't breathe, according to WREG.
Edwards said: 'They showed up in force and subdued him.
'They hogtied and put his face down on the stretcher.
'The family as you might expect is grieving, and they are not irrational at all, but they want answers.
'They want to know why Troy died.'
David McLaughlin, a local attorney who was dining nearby with his family, observed the incident and his son shot video of the arrest, the Commercial Appeal reported.
In the video, Goode can be seen on a stretcher on his stomach with his arm and legs restrained.
McLaughlin said: 'You can't see it on the video, but he was convulsing, or fighting.
'He was clearly alive and moving. They start to move him toward the ambulance.
'We don't see a lot more struggling. I was concerned for him. We all were.'
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Witnesses and the family's attorney have indicated the way cops restrained Goode may have led to his death
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Southaven Police arrived after a 911 call was placed when Kelli pulled over on the way home from a concert
The family and Edwards have yet to accuse police, who are using the phrase 'alleged LSD overdose', of committing a crime, but have indicated excessive forced seems like a possibility.
Goode was 'not a physical threat' and there was 'no threatening behavior' Edwards told the Clarion-Ledger.
Edwards added: 'I don’t know the cause of death, and I’m not going to speculate on it nor am I going to point the finger at this point in time
'This is a guy who was chemical engineer. He’s taken into police custody and he’s dead.'
The family has asked the Mississippi Attorney General to investigate the case and an office spokesperson acknowledged receiving the request but did not say if an investigation will occur.
The deceased University of Memphis graduate worked for nexAir in Memphis.
Police caught 'hogtying' Troy Goode who later died
It says "alleged". We don't know who "alleged". If he was having an asthmatic attack , the cops may have just said "Oh he's on LSD". Let's see what toxicology says.
his wife, apparently, called the police. It's often a bad idea. If he was no threat--why call them? Why even pull over? If he was acting in a way that could have caused an accident--then he was a threat. They don't get to have it both ways.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
You are right. Calling the Police for anything now is a "bad idea". I used to believe the Police were there to help. And, would help professionally and also in a way that minimize harm to anyone. Now, that simply isn't the case anymore.
You are right. Calling the Police for anything now is a "bad idea". I used to believe the Police were there to help. And, would help professionally and also in a way that minimize harm to anyone. Now, that simply isn't the case anymore.
Not only is there that possibility, but you take a chance on things not going the way you want. WTF did she expect them to do? Just watch him run around? She could have done that by herself.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
You are right. Calling the Police for anything now is a "bad idea". I used to believe the Police were there to help. And, would help professionally and also in a way that minimize harm to anyone. Now, that simply isn't the case anymore.
Not only is there that possibility, but you take a chance on things not going the way you want. WTF did she expect them to do? Just watch him run around? She could have done that by herself.
Was it her job to figure out what they should do? She wanted them to help him be safe and probably get him in an ambulance or maybe they had an epi pen or something. I dont' think she expected them to MURDER her husband. Wow.
You are right. Calling the Police for anything now is a "bad idea". I used to believe the Police were there to help. And, would help professionally and also in a way that minimize harm to anyone. Now, that simply isn't the case anymore.
Not only is there that possibility, but you take a chance on things not going the way you want. WTF did she expect them to do? Just watch him run around? She could have done that by herself.
Was it her job to figure out what they should do? She wanted them to help him be safe and probably get him in an ambulance or maybe they had an epi pen or something. I dont' think she expected them to MURDER her husband. Wow.
We don't know why he died, so to call it murder at this point is prematrue, to say the least. Beyond that, he resisted. There's only so much you can do when someone resists. Playing tiddly winks with him at that point is not going to happen. They did, in fact, aid in getting him into the ambulance.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
If you sit on someone to the point that they can't breathe and they suffocate, I think that is called murder.
We do not know at this point that is how he died. Also, he was resisting the police. Accidental death is more likely even if that is how he died--and that's a big IF.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
Let's wait toxicology. If he was on LSD, then yes, he may have gone bezerk in a bad way. If he was having an asthma attack and suffocating from hypoxia and acting erratically, that is a different thing. Acting erracting, btw, doen'st mean the police need to KILL you either. Sheesh.
Let's wait toxicology. If he was on LSD, then yes, he may have gone bezerk in a bad way. If he was having an asthma attack and suffocating from hypoxia and acting erratically, that is a different thing. Acting erracting, btw, doen'st mean the police need to KILL you either. Sheesh.
I am waiting on the autopsy. You are the one screaming murder. I'm saying we don't know.
Either way, they didn't do it deliberately, so to say nonsense like "need to kill" is absurd.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
It won't matter for you either way. You assume the police are right no matter what. Even if they choke and kill a guy for selling loose cigarettes. Welcome to the Totalitarian State.
It won't matter for you either way. You assume the police are right no matter what. Even if they choke and kill a guy for selling loose cigarettes. Welcome to the Totalitarian State.
LOL!!!! Have you ever read any of my posts? I pretty much hate the po-po. I would almost never recommend getting them involved. I thought the guy in Ferguson Missouri should have been charged with murder.
Youve lost it.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
well, you've got to consider the situation from the officer's viewpoint for a moment--the guy was unarmed, true, but once the cops are on site if he injures himself, the cops are liable, if he injures someone else, the cops are liable--it's a hobson's choice--they restrained the guy and controlled the situation--did they murder the guy ? --from what can see now would say no--did they overreact ? possibly but again not murder
as per usual, the forensics will tell the tale
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" the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. "--edmund burke
The crazy thing is, teachers learn restraint techniques. Why don't police? Have you ever tried restraining a wild, kicking, screaming, elementary school child ? It's like trying to catch a greased pig. If tiny old ladies can do it, police officers should be able to as well.
Especially since there are so many of them that typically respond to the simplest of calls. I got pulled over for not wearing my seatbelt (I had it on, it's black and so was my top and the officer couldn't see it) and 3 cruisers surrounded my car as the officer ran my license and plates. 6 total officers got out of the car and surrounded me for a seatbelt infraction that I didn't even commit. It was ridiculous. As the officer gave me back my license and I asked him why the big response and show of force for such a small infraction, he put his hand on his gun, and said loudly and with force "this is the way we do things here ma'am. Do you have a problem with that?" Ridiculous.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
have you ever tried to restrain an adult who is high on coke, pcp, lsd, etc ? they don't register pain, they're irrational, combative and can be, in certain circumstances, very dangerous to you or to others
am not defending the cops here, merely pointing out what MAY have been the case
as far as YOUR citation situation, agree with you completely--have dealt with several of the " john wayne / dirty harry " types before--rarely pleasant
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" the only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing. "--edmund burke
I agree that may have been the case. I would be interested in knowing what techniques the police tried or did they go directly to hog tying him ? Is it even legal to tie someone up like that? Why didn't they pepper spray him to subdue him ? So many choices...
People saying "I can't breathe" should be a clue as well! Perhaps he needed assistance! Duh!
-- Edited by Mellow Momma on Tuesday 21st of July 2015 11:34:18 AM
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
his wife, apparently, called the police. It's often a bad idea. If he was no threat--why call them? Why even pull over? If he was acting in a way that could have caused an accident--then he was a threat. They don't get to have it both ways.
They were allegedly TOLD he took LSD. I agree - they can't have it both ways. Either he was acting so whacked his wife had to pull over and call the cops, or he wasn't. Which is it?
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LawyerLady
I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you.
his wife, apparently, called the police. It's often a bad idea. If he was no threat--why call them? Why even pull over? If he was acting in a way that could have caused an accident--then he was a threat. They don't get to have it both ways.
They were allegedly TOLD he took LSD. I agree - they can't have it both ways. Either he was acting so whacked his wife had to pull over and call the cops, or he wasn't. Which is it?
That's my main beef. They are NOW saying he was "no threat"--but normally cops aren't called unless there is some perceived threat of some sort.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
But if he hadn't been doing what he was doing, he wouldn't be dead.
Police are trained to serve and protect. Not diagnose and treat.
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A flock of flirting flamingos is pure, passionate, pink pandemonium-a frenetic flamingle-mangle-a discordant discotheque of delirious dancing, flamboyant feathers, and flamingo lingo.
But if he hadn't been doing what he was doing, he wouldn't be dead.
Police are trained to serve and protect. Not diagnose and treat.
Yup. Its beyond sad this guy died. However, it's not like they shot an unarmed man. They didn't intentionally use deadly force--even IF their actions were the proximate cause of death.
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I'm not arguing, I'm just explaining why I'm right.
Well, I could agree with you--but then we'd both be wrong.
I read another article that said when they strapped him to the gurney, the put him face down into the gurney. That's not a great idea - especially for someone with asthma. I am sure he had trouble breathing before and then with his face smashed into the gurney and strapped in, it only got worse. I would think the EMT's would be more at fault than the police. Hog tied is one thing, but face down into the sheets is another.
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Out of all the lies I have told, "just kidding" is my favorite !
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