California
Related: About this forumCalifornia police kept death in custody a secret for seven years, inquiry reveals
California law enforcement officials have worked for seven years to keep secret a death in police custody, labeling the case an accident and refusing to disclose basic information to journalists and the family of the victim, an investigation published on Monday reveals.
Darryl Mefferd, 49, died on 8 December 2016 while he was detained by police in Vallejo, a city of 125,000 in the San Francisco Bay Area. The case was uncovered by Open Vallejo, a local non-profit news organization, which shared its records with the Guardian.
The afternoon before he died, Mefferd had seemed disoriented and dehydrated and was making paranoid remarks, so his niece, Courtney Mefferd, took him to a local hospital. He was treated with vitamins and a sedative and declared stable, medical records show. By around 11pm, he was anxious to be discharged and left the hospital against doctors recommendations.
Outside the hospital, Mefferd encountered the Vallejo police department (VPD) officer Jeremy Callinan. Callinan was responding to the hospitals call for help with a female patient who had fled the facility, but the officer instead located Mefferd and placed him in protective custody, police records show. When Cindie, Mefferds sister, arrived at the hospital, she saw Callinan leading her brother into a police vehicle, she told Open Vallejo. She said she asked the officer to let her take her brother home, but the officer refused and said he would instead take Mefferd to a mental health crisis center. They are going to kill me, Cindie recalled her brother saying as he was driven away.
It remains unclear what exactly happened next. The Solano county sheriff coroners office investigated the death, but a report written by the sergeant in charge of the investigation included conflicting narratives.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/article/2024/jun/10/california-vallejo-police-death-investigation
Wait, what? They're supposed to be helping with a female patient and instead round up a guy who ends up dead? I smell fish.....
ret5hd
(21,320 posts)FirstLight
(14,097 posts)I can remember friends back in the 90s say dont get pulled over there, especially if your car looks "poor" or if you're a POC
...pretty sure they're the ones who flubbed the Jaycee Lee Duggard case too... all those years they never looked in the house or backyard.