Homicide convictions reversed for Colorado paramedics who injected ketamine into Elijah McClain
Source: AP
By MEAD GRUVER and MATTHEW BROWN
Updated 5:30 PM CDT, June 4, 2026
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) A Colorado court reversed homicide convictions against two paramedics on Thursday in the 2019 death of Elijah McClain, a Black man who was pinned down by police and injected with a fatal dose of ketamine.
McClains final words I cant breathe foreshadowed those of George Floyd a year later in Minneapolis, and the Colorado mans name became part of the rallying cries for social justice that swept the U.S. in 2020.
The appeals court ordered new trials for Aurora Fire Rescue paramedics Jeremy Cooper and Peter Cichuniec. McClain, 23, had been forcibly restrained and put in a neck hold by police, who stopped him in response to a suspicious person complaint as the massage therapist walked home from a convenience store in the Denver suburb in 2019.
Criminal charges against paramedics and emergency medical technicians involved in police custody cases are rare. As McClains death and others raised questions about the use of ketamine to subdue struggling suspects, this prosecution sent shock waves through the ranks of first responders across the U.S.

Read more: https://apnews.com/article/elijah-mcclain-ketamine-paramedics-homicide-appeal-48f989417c7df4a4947c722dd95c1770