Seven CHP Officers Arrested & Charged For Killing Edward Bronstein Over Drunk Driving

1 year ago
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NOTE: Article calls Victim a "Reformed Gang Member"
Seven California Highway Patrol officers and a nurse were charged with manslaughter Wednesday in connection with the death of a man who screamed, “I can’t breathe!” as they tried to draw blood from him, prosecutors said.

Edward Bronstein was suspected of driving while intoxicated in 2020 when he was apprehended and later died in CHP custody at the agency’s Altadena station.

The six officers and a sergeant who filmed the deadly encounter with Bronstein were charged with involuntary manslaughter and assault under color of authority, according to Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George Gascón. An attending nurse at the scene was also charged with involuntary manslaughter, Gascón said.

“These officers had a legal duty to Mr. Bronstein,” Gascón said as he announced the charges. “He was in their custody … and their failure was criminally negligent.”

The officers charged were Sgt. Michael Little, Dionisio Fiorella, Dusty Osmanson, Darren Parsons, Diego Romero, Justin Silva and Marciel Terry. The nurse was identified as Arbi Baghalian.

It was not immediately clear if any of them had defense attorneys. The officers have not been arrested and are expected to self-surrender, according to Tiffiny Blacknell, director of communications for the district attorney’s office.

The charges come nearly three years after the death of Bronstein, 38, a Burbank resident. A video released as part of a civil lawsuit last year shows Bronstein’s desperate last moments, screaming “I can’t breathe” as the officers wrestle with him and try to forcibly draw his blood after a vehicle stop and arrest in March 2020.

Bronstein was pulled over by Osmanson on the 5 Freeway on suspicion of driving under the influence and taken to the Altadena station. Once there, officers tried to draw his blood to measure his alcohol level, but he refused.

In a 16-minute video recorded by Little, which Gascón played at the Wednesday news conference, Bronstein can be seen kneeling on the ground while a gloved officer presses his hands onto his shoulders and an officer who is off-camera instructs Bronstein to comply with a court-ordered blood draw.

After a lengthy back-and-forth, Bronstein yells that he will comply with the officer’s demands. But additional officers can then be seen surrounding him and holding him down with their body weight as he repeatedly shouts in distress.

“I promise, I promise!” Bronstein can be heard pleading, but an officer responded that it was “too late” while continuing to press down on Bronstein. After nearly a minute of being pinned, Bronstein says, “I can’t breathe!” as the blood draw takes place.

Roughly one minute later, Bronstein goes slack and stops responding to the officers, according to the video. One calls his name and slaps the side of his head while he remains face-down on the ground. But several minutes elapse before officers attempt to deliver oxygen or CPR.

Someone can be seen repeatedly checking Bronstein’s neck and wrists for a pulse, but no officer appears to react with urgency. One person can be seen fidgeting with the blood vials drawn from Bronstein while his body lies prone.

“Our agency’s top priority is protecting the safety and well-being of all Californians, and I am saddened that Mr. Bronstein died while in our custody and care,” CHP Commissioner

Ed Obayashi, a Northern California Sheriff’s deputy and use-of-force expert, said he is not surprised by the charges against the officers. “This is low-level misdemeanor. Why would officers consider using such force?” he asked.

“Their use of force here violated basic training and the law. The DUI suspect was not resisting, he was trying to breathe,” he said. “If you use this kind of weight on a body, a death or serious injury is predictable. This is de facto deadly force.”

A Los Angeles County coroner’s office report could not conclusively determine Bronstein’s cause of death but attributed it to “acute methamphetamine, intoxication during restraint by law enforcement.”

Luis Carrillo, the Bronstein family’s attorney, said there was only a “trace” amount of methamphetamine in the victim’s system and argued that the officers’ actions were the primary cause of death. Bronstein was driving with blood-alcohol content of 0.07% at the time of the incident, below the legal limit, according to Carrillo.

Edward Tapia, the victim’s father, said his son did not have any substance abuse issues and was a reformed gang member who wanted to work as an airplane mechanic. He was working in his father’s auto body shop at the time of his death. Both Tapia and Carrillo said that while they believed Gascón should have filed second-degree murder charges, they were happy to see someone held accountable.

Tapia said. “I miss my son so much but … I don’t know what else to say. I think when you see the video you’ll understand.”

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