Current:Home > ScamsFormer Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man -OceanicInvest
Former Milwaukee hotel workers charged with murder after video shows them holding down Black man
View
Date:2025-04-25 06:38:54
MADISON, Wis. (AP) — Prosecutors in Milwaukee have charged four hotel workers with being a party to D’Vontaye Mitchell’s murder after scouring video showing them piling on top of the Black man in an incident Mitchell’s family says is disturbingly similar to George Floyd’s death.
Mitchell’s family spent weeks pressuring prosecutors to charge the hotel workers in the June 30 death. District Attorney John Chisholm finally filed a count of being a party to felony murder against each of them on Tuesday.
Here’s what to know about Mitchell’s death and the Hyatt workers, who now face sentences of up to nearly 16 years in prison if they’re convicted.
How did the incident start?
The criminal complaint charging the hotel workers offers a detailed account of the last moments of Mitchell’s life based on Hyatt surveillance footage, witness accounts and a bystander’s video.
Surveillance video shows Mitchell running through the downtown high-rise hotel’s lobby on the afternoon of June 30, according to the complaint. He enters the gift shop and then the women’s bathroom.
Two women who were in the bathroom later told investigators that Mitchell tried to lock them in the bathroom. One woman said she told him to let her out but he refused. She was eventually able to push past him.
Video shows off-duty Hyatt security guard Brandon Turner dragging Mitchell out of the bathroom. He and a hotel guest then get into a scuffle with Mitchell and drag him across the lobby, through the foyer and out into the hotel driveway. At one point Turner punches Mitchell six times.
Once outside, the hotel guest returns to the building but on-duty security guard Todd Erickson, bellhop Herbert Williamson and front desk worker Devin Johnson-Carson help Turner hold Mitchell down on his stomach for what the complaint says was eight to nine minutes.
Johnson-Carson would later tell detectives he heard Mitchell groaning and saying “stop” and “why?” and something about breathing. Erickson told Mitchell that “I don’t want to hear that,” followed by a profanity. Johnson-Carson also said Erickson struck Mitchell with a baton.
Williamson told investigators he put his knee on the middle of Mitchell’s back, adding that Mitchell was strong, wouldn’t calm down and tried to bite Erickson. Mitchell kept asking what he did wrong, Williamson said.
A bystander’s video of the incident caught Mitchell yelling “please” and “I’m sorry” while breathing heavily. Erickson turns to the camera and says: “This is what happens when you go into the ladies’ room.”
By the time police and emergency responders arrived Mitchell had stopped moving, the complaint said.
How did Mitchell die?
The Milwaukee County Medical Examiner’s Office determined that Mitchell was morbidly obese and suffered from heart disease, according to the complaint, and had cocaine and methamphetamine in his system.
After watching video of the incident, Assistant Medical Examiner Lauren Decker determined that Mitchell suffered “restraint asphyxia” from the workers holding down his legs, arms, back and head. In other words, they prevented Mitchell from breathing.
Decker said Mitchell might have lived had the workers moved him to his side. The medical examiner’s office classified the manner of death as homicide on Friday.
What happened next?
Mitchell’s family began drawing comparisons of his death to Floyd, who died in 2020 after a white Minneapolis police officer pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes. The death of Floyd, who was Black, sparked a national reckoning on race relations.
Mitchell’s family began pressuring Chisholm to file charges against the Hyatt employees. The Rev. Al Sharpton, a longtime civil rights activist, delivered the elegy at Mitchell’s funeral. The family hired Ben Crump, a noted civil rights attorney who represented Floyd’s family.
“Everybody in America, after George Floyd, should have trained their employees, especially security personnel, to not put knees on peoples’ backs and peoples’ necks,” Crump told reporters in July.
Why did the district attorney choose to file charges now?
Chisholm’s office said it was reviewing the case as a homicide but was waiting for full autopsy results. The criminal complaint concludes with a rare explanation of prosecutors’ rationale for the charges, saying that the four employees’ impaired Mitchell’s breathing due to his weight and drug consumption and they knew it.
“The actions and words of DM, the distress that he was in, show that all four Defendants were aware that holding DM face first on the ground was ‘practically certain’ to cause ‘impairment of his physical condition,’” the complaint says.
What are the hotel employees saying?
They maintain they didn’t intentionally kill Mitchell.
Williamson, the bellhop, told WTMJ-TV on Tuesday after the charges were filed that hotel management told him to hold Mitchell down. He didn’t tell the station who told him that but said he never committed any acts of violence against Mitchell.
“If I’m wrong for that, I mean, may God treat me in the proper way that I should be treated,” he said.
Erickson’s attorney, Michael Steinle, didn’t return messages from The Associated Press seeking comment. Erickson told investigators, however, that he knows about pressure points in the human body and couldn’t remember ever striking Mitchell, even though he was very strong, kept resisting and tried to bite him, the complaint said. Erickson insisted he didn’t do anything to intentionally hurt or kill Mitchell.
According to the complaint, Turner told a detective he heard women screaming in the hotel bathroom and Mitchell was trying to lock himself inside. He said Mitchell tried to reach into his pockets, called him names and swung at him first. He acknowledged punching Mitchell several times. He said he thought Mitchell was on drugs and at one point moved Mitchell’s clothes off his face.
Johnson-Carson told a detective that he saw Turner fighting with Mitchell and Mitchell didn’t appear to be stable mentally because he was speaking “gibberish,” the complaint said. He decided to help Turner because elderly people and children were in the lobby, the on-duty staff were mostly women and Turner was smaller than Mitchell, he said.
Erickson told everyone to turn Mitchell onto his stomach and he thought Erickson was going to handcuff him, Johnson-Carson said. He didn’t see anyone strangle Mitchell and none of them thought Mitchell had stopped breathing. At one point he said he told Williamson to stop applying pressure, and Williamson finally got up.
Online court records don’t list any attorneys for Turner, Williamson or Johnson-Carson, and the AP was not able to find phone listings for them.
What’s next?
Arrests warrants have been issued for all four defendants. As of Wednesday, Erickson was in custody but there was no record the others had been arrested yet.
Once they are in custody, they will have to make brief initial appearances in court. Erickson made his Wednesday morning.
Preliminary hearings will follow before a judge decides whether there’s enough evidence for them to stand trial.
veryGood! (15743)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Pentagon has ordered a US aircraft carrier to remain in the Mediterranean near Israel
- A cat-astrophe? Cats eat over 2,000 species worldwide, study finds
- Former Jaguars financial manager pleads guilty to stealing $22M. He faces up to 30 years in prison
- 'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
- Arizona’s governor is sending the state’s National Guard to the border to help with a migrant influx
- Matthew Perry Was Reportedly Clean for 19 Months Before His Death
- Hague court rejects bid to ban transfer to Israel of F-35 fighter jet parts from Dutch warehouse
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Jake Paul oozes confidence. But Andre August has faced scarier challenges than Paul.
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- New York City-based comedian Kenny DeForest dead at 37 after being struck by car
- New York doctor, wife who appeared on Below Deck charged with fake opioid prescription scheme
- Prince Harry wins 'widespread and habitual' phone hacking lawsuit against British tabloid
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Finland reports a rush of migrant crossings hours before the reclosure of 2 border posts with Russia
- Doping law leads to two more indictments, this time against coaches who used to be elite sprinters
- Ja Morant feels 'guilt' over Grizzlies record in first public comments since suspension
Recommendation
McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
Congressional Budget Office projects lower inflation and higher unemployment into 2025
Village council member in Ukraine sets off hand grenades during a meeting and injures 26
Economists now predict the U.S. is heading for a soft landing. Here's what that means.
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Ring In The Weekend With The 21 Best Sales That Are Happening Right Now
New York Giants star partners with tech platform to promote small-business software
Apple adds Stolen Device Protection feature to new iOS beta