Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers Adam Ahmad and Steven Sanchez, who were accused in the death of Herman Whitfield III, were found not guilty on all five charges against them.
The two officers were facing charges of reckless homicide, involuntary manslaughter and three counts of battery.
Defense attorney John Kautzman, who represented the officers, said he “couldn’t be more pleased” with the outcome.
The jury reached its decision after about two hours of deliberation on Friday, following a five-day trial that included heated arguments and testimony at a Marion County Superior Court. The jury heard from Whitfield IIIās father, the officers on trial, other IMPD officers who responded to the Whitfield home, police instructors as well as medical and forensic experts.
Ahmad and Sanchez were two of the six officers who responded to the Whitfield home after a 911 call from Whitfield IIIās parents, Gladys Whitfield and Herman Whitfield Jr. They called at 3:20 a.m. on April 25, 2022 as their son was going through a mental health emergency.
Whitfield III, a 39-year-old gifted pianist, was shocked with a conducted electrical weapon, handcuffed and restrained face-down by the officers.
On April 26, 2022, the Marion County Coronerās Office ruled Whitfield IIIās death a homicide and further stated the cause of death was heart failure while under law enforcement restraint. The report stated obesity and hypertensive cardiovascular disease as contributing factors. Toxicology tests, included in that report, also showed that Whitfield III had cannabinoids, including Delta-9 and THC, in his system.
āI think it’s important that we all understand that that was a tragedy, but it’s also a tragedy when the state brings a criminal case against police officers that were just out there trying to do their job,” Kautzman said following the verdict. āSworn police officers aren’t in the business of going out and harming. They’re in the business of going out and trying to help people, and that’s what they were trying to do that day.ā
Whitfield IIIās case has led to widespread coverage and a local campaign to fire the officers involved and push for an investigation from the U.S. Department of Justice into IMPDās practices.
In April 2023, a grand jury in Indianapolis indicted two of the six responding officers, Adam Ahmad and Steven Sanchez, on charges related to Whitfield’s death.
Separately, the Whitfield family filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city of Indianapolis and the IMPD officers who responded the night of Whitfield IIIās death. The family also filed a lawsuit against the city and police in federal court in 2022, which is still pending.
The wrongful death lawsuit alleges Whitfield III called out āI canāt breatheā while being restrained by IMPD officers. His parents tried to get him help.