Current:Home > FinanceRetrial underway for ex-corrections officer charged in Ohio inmate’s death -ProfitPoint
Retrial underway for ex-corrections officer charged in Ohio inmate’s death
View
Date:2025-04-27 15:19:24
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) — Jury selection has started in the retrial of a former corrections officer charged in the death of an inmate at a county jail in northern Ohio.
Mark Cooper faces a reckless homicide charge and two counts of involuntary manslaughter. The charges stem from Cooper’s alleged role in the September 2019 death of Alexander Rios, 28, at the Richland County jail. Cooper’s first trial last November ended in a mistrial when jurors could not reach a verdict.
Jury selection started Monday and was expected to continue Tuesday. The Ohio attorney general’s office is now prosecuting the case, after the first trial was handled by the Medina County prosecutor’s office.
Rios fell unconscious during a struggle with guards and after being shocked with a stun gun in September 2019, authorities have said. He died at a hospital eight days after the confrontation, which was captured on video shot by jail staffers.
The video begins with a guard telling Rios to step down from a partition inside his cell and warning that he would be placed in a restraint chair for his own safety. Guards rush in when he refuses. Rios then runs from the cell and is quickly tackled. Five guards, including Cooper, pile on him as another officer not seen in the video says, “tase him.”
One of the guards presses his fist into the side of Rios’ head and punches him several times. Rios appears to lose consciousness about 4 minutes into the video. A minute later, a guard says Rios “is turning blue” as they try to place his limp body into a restraint chair. The unseen officer then radios for an ambulance.
Rios had been arrested on a warrant and jailed the day before the confrontation on a charge of illegal conveyance of drugs onto the grounds of a government facility.
veryGood! (33)
Related
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- Mining the Sun: Some in the Wyoming Epicenter of the Coal Industry Hope to Sustain Its Economy With Renewables
- 3 Columbia University administrators put on leave over alleged text exchange at antisemitism panel
- Score Stylish $59 Crossbodies from Kate Spade Outlet, Plus More Savings up to 70% off & an Extra 25%
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Shoppers Can't Stop Raving About These Lightweight Bermuda Shorts: They're the Perfect Length & So Comfy
- LOCALIZE IT: HIV cases are on the rise in young gay Latinos, especially in the Southeast
- Chicago’s iconic ‘Bean’ sculpture reopens to tourists after nearly a year of construction
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Meet the millionaires next door. These Americans made millions out of nothing.
Ranking
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- Ink Master Star Ryan Hadley Dead at 46 After Cancer Battle
- I Always Hated Cleaning My Bathroom Until I Finally Found Products That Worked
- Why Reggie Jackson's powerful remarks on racism still resonate today
- The Super Bowl could end in a 'three
- Body camera video captures frantic moments, intense gunfire after fatal shooting of Minneapolis cop
- A new Jeep Cherokee is all but guaranteed and it can't come soon enough
- Heat wave sizzles parts of the country as floods and severe weather force people from their homes
Recommendation
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
Horoscopes Today, June 24, 2024
Jonathan Majors cries while accepting Perseverance Award months after assault conviction
Inside Charlie’s Queer Books, an unapologetically pink and joyful space in Seattle
IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
Family of Massachusetts teen John McCabe searches for justice in 1969 murder
Bob Good primary race still too close too call. Good signals he'll push for recount
105-year-old Washington woman gets master's 8 decades after WWII interrupted degree