The more I read about this story, the more it seems to me that the biggest factor leading to Eric Garner's death were with how the police (and EMTs) handled things after he was handcuffed.
I've watched both videos of the aftermath that I can see and I can't see any indication of any officer - or anyone else - checking Garner's vital signs in the several minutes before the police arrived.
It's also worth pointing out that several of the EMTs who responded were suspended, and their actions have been criticized as well:
EMTs and paramedics who responded to Eric Garner have been suspended without pay by hospital | SILive.com
I agree with several other posters (and the NYPD and the medical examiner) that the choke hold was inappropriate, but I can't help but wonder if Eric Garner would still be alive if, say, they say him up after he was restrained or if the paramedics administered oxygen as soon as they arrived.
... or if the cops had just checked his pulse regularly while he was unconscious.
I've watched both videos of the aftermath that I can see and I can't see any indication of any officer - or anyone else - checking Garner's vital signs in the several minutes before the police arrived.
It's also worth pointing out that several of the EMTs who responded were suspended, and their actions have been criticized as well:
Israel Miranda, president of Local 27 of the Uniformed EMT and Paramedics, said that responding emergency personnel should have provided Garner with supplemental oxygen, even if he had a pulse. Miranda's union represents FDNY EMS personnel, but not RUMC EMTs.
Miranda made particular note of Garner's words to cops, captured on video, "I can't breathe! I can't breathe!"
Said Miranda, "Knowing that he's saying he's having trouble breathing, at this point, you're going to be giving him oxygen."
An EMT could also insert an airway tube into a patient's mouth that's attached to a bag to assist breathing.
One veteran EMS source questioned why the responding EMTs didn't bring any equipment when they arrived on the scene.
"She should have either put him on oxygen or put an airway in his mouth," the source said. "They were there for four and a half minutes and they did none of that."
The source also questioned the way the EMT looked for Garner's pulse, noting that a check near the carotid artery would be performed "to the left or the right of the trachea, not on the side of the neck."
Otherwise, the source said, "You're feeling your own pulse in your hand."
EMTs and paramedics who responded to Eric Garner have been suspended without pay by hospital | SILive.com
I agree with several other posters (and the NYPD and the medical examiner) that the choke hold was inappropriate, but I can't help but wonder if Eric Garner would still be alive if, say, they say him up after he was restrained or if the paramedics administered oxygen as soon as they arrived.
... or if the cops had just checked his pulse regularly while he was unconscious.