Photo Credit: Photo: MGN Online

DENVER—The Denver suburb of Aurora has agreed to pay $15 million to settle a lawsuit brought by the parents of Elijah McClain, a Black man who died after suburban Denver police stopped him on the street and put him in a neck hold two years ago, the city and family attorneys announced.

A federal magistrate judge accepted terms of the settlement after a mediation session, said Qusair Mohamedbhai, an attorney for McClain’s mother, Sheneen McClain.

Outside court, Sheneen McClain said Nov. 19 she was glad to have the agreement finalized but noted the work of fighting for justice for her son just makes her miss him more.

“The money is just the world’s way of saying, ‘We’re sorry,’ but it’s not going to help me heal the hole in my heart,” she said.

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The settlement amount was agreed to in July but not officially disclosed until now because of a dispute between McClain’s parents about how the wording of the agreement could impact their dispute over how the money should be divided. Sheneen McClain said Elijah’s father, LaWayne Mosley, was not involved in raising him. How the money will be divided will be addressed separately.

In a statement, Mr. Mosley did not address the dispute but said he hoped the settlement would send a message to police.

“I hope Elijah’s legacy is that police will think twice before killing another innocent person,” he said.

Mr. Mosley’s lawyer, Mari Newman, said the settlement was the largest ever in Colorado in a civil rights case and only the latest example of a new standard of accountability for police since protests over the killing of George Floyd as well as Elijah McClain.

The size of the settlement was emblematic of the harm done to both Mr. McClain’s mother and the community, Atty. Mohamedbhai said.

The lawsuit alleged the police’s violent treatment of Mr. McClain amounted to torture and was part of a pattern of racially biased policing that has involved aggression and violence against Black people. Paramedics also injected him with a powerful sedative.

Mr. McClain was a 23-year-old massage therapist who played his violin for cats in a rescue shelter. His 2019 death and his pleading words to police on body camera footage—“I’m an introvert, and I’m just different”—drew widespread attention after Mr. Floyd’s murder in Minneapolis set off global protests last year.

The local prosecutor declined to file charges against the three officers who confronted Mr. McClain, partly because an autopsy could not determine exactly how he died. However, a grand jury indicted the officers and two paramedics in September  following an investigation by Attorney General Phil Weiser ordered by Gov. Jared Polis.

The lawsuit alleged the extreme force officers used against Mr. McClain and his struggle to survive it dramatically increased the amount of lactic acid in his system, leading to his death, possibly along with the large dose of the sedative ketamine he was given.

An outside investigation commissioned by the city faulted the police probe into Mr. McClain’s arrest for not pressing for answers about how officers treated him. It found there was no evidence justifying officers’ decision to stop Mr. McClain, who had been reported as suspicious because he was wearing a ski mask as he walked down the street waving his hands. He had not been accused of breaking any law.

One of the three officers who arrested Mr. McClain was fired last year, but not for stopping him. Jason Rosenblatt lost his job for responding “ha ha” to a photo taken by other former officers reenacting the neck hold at a memorial to Mr. McClain.

Aurora police have been plagued by other allegations of misconduct against people of color.

Last year, the department came under fire for handcuffing four Black girls who were held face down in a parking lot in a mix-up over a stolen car. Prosecutors said officers committed no crime.

This summer, an officer shown on body camera footage beating a Black man with his gun was charged with assault and resigned. 

Mr. Weiser and city officials announced the city had agreed to reforms following a first-of-its-kind civil rights investigation by Mr. Weiser’s office that found a pattern of racially biased policing and excessive force. A monitor who will oversee if Aurora is following the plan and meeting milestones over about five years has yet to be hired. (AP)