Prison sentenced vacated for paramedic convicted in death of Elijah McClain in Colorado

US

The prison sentence for one of the former paramedics convicted in the 2019 death of Elijah McClain was vacated Friday by a Colorado district court judge. Peter Cichuniec had been found guilty of criminally negligent homicide last year and will now only face a four-year probation period.

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Jeremy Cooper, left, and Peter Cichuniec, center

CBS


According to the Denver Post, Judge Mark Warner said in Friday’s court hearing that he was vacating the sentence due to “unusual and extenuating circumstances and they are truly exceptional in this particular case.”

The Colorado Attorney General’s Office also said this week’s court decision was made due to “unusual circumstances” in Cichuniec’s case, but did not elaborate. 

Cichuniec was a paramedic with Aurora Fire Rescue in 2019 when he responded to the scene where McClain, a 23-year-old Black man, had a confrontation with police. McClain had been walking home and police stopped him after someone reported him as looking suspicious and the situation escalated to violence. After Cichuniec arrived, he, along with another paramedic, injected McClain — who had been slammed to the ground and restrained by officers — with ketamine. McClain went into cardiac arrest soon after that and died several days later.

Cichuniec was sentenced to 5 years in prison in March, which was the minimum possible sentence. After that, Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser issued a statement saying in part that the sentence sent “a strong message that no profession, whether a paramedic, a nurse, a police officer, an elected official, or a CEO should be immune from criminal prosecution for actions that violate the law and harm people.”

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Elijah McClain

CBS


During his trial, Cichuniec testified that his training never provided a warning that ketamine could kill someone.

Paramedic Jeremy Cooper was also found guilty of criminally negligent homicide and sentenced to four years probation. One of the police officers, Randy Roedema, was also convicted in the case of criminally negligent homicide and sentenced in January to 14 months in jail. Two other officers were acquitted.

As a result of the lengthy investigations that ensued after McClain’s death, the Aurora Police Department went through major reforms. McClain’s death also led to protests and scrutiny to the practice of administering ketamine to patients who are showing signs of being agitated.

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