Did Mississippi police kill this man with a 20-minute chokehold?
On July 8, Jonathan Sanders, a 39-year old Mississippi man, died after an altercation with police. Early headlines from the Jackson Clarion Ledger, the state’s largest newspaper, were fairly straightforward. Police: Incident between horseman, officer ends in death, read one shortly after the incident. Yesterday, the headline Stonewall seeks peace in wake of police-related killing came out.
But then the Guardian published a shocking story about the incident. Entitled “Unarmed Mississippi man died after 20-minute police chokehold, witnesses say,” the piece includes several gasp-worthy new alleged details of the case.
Through Sanders’ family attorney, The Guardian reported on the accounts of three alleged eyewitnesses to the event, marking a sharp turn in the story’s narrative. “The three witnesses are related to Sanders by marriage and one has 10 years of experience working in law enforcement,” reported the Guardian. Which means this should be taken with a grain of salt.
Family lawyers told the paper the “state medical examiners provisionally found Jonathan Sanders died through homicide by manual asphyxiation,” and that they believe there is probable cause for prosecution.
Mississippi police are being tight-lipped about the incident. “We can’t deal in speculation. We have to deal in facts and truth,” Police Chief Michael Street told the Clarion Ledger, saying police have to complete the investigation before making any information public. Fusion’s attempts to reach the department for further comment were unsuccessful.
But practically every line of the Guardian report is gasp-worthy. Below, some lowlights.
Before the altercation, the officer allegedly said “I’m going to get that n****r”
Before the altercation, everyone agrees that Sanders was riding a horse-drawn buggy through the small town of Stonewall, population about 1,100. An early report from the Clarion Ledger said that he pulled the buggy over into his cousin’s yard when the confrontation started.