Attorney Benjamin Crump, foreground left, and Doreen Coleman, mother of Randy Cox, hold a poster of Cox, outside a courthouse in New Haven, Conn., Friday, July 8, 2022. Cox, who was being transported in a police van without seatbelts, was paralyzed when the van braked suddenly. His family asked federal authorities Friday to file civil rights charges against the officers involved. (Ben Lambert/New Haven Register via AP)

By Pat Eaton-Robb,
The Associated Press

The family of a Black man in Connecticut, paralyzed when a police van without seatbelts braked suddenly, asked federal authorities July 8 to file civil rights charges against the officers involved.

The driver was taking Randy Cox, 36, to a police station in New Haven, Connecticut, on June 19 for processing on a weapons charge when he braked hard to avoid a collision, police said, causing Cox to fly headfirst into the wall of the van. His family said he remains paralyzed from the chest down.

Cox’s mother, two sisters and civil rights attorney Ben Crump spoke before meeting with U.S. Department of Justice officials in New Haven July 8, arguing that Cox’s constitutional rights were violated.

“You ask yourself, was it cruel and unusual punishment to put him in the back of that police transportation van with no seat belt, knowing that if you’re speeding, if you slam on the brakes, that somebody is going to be seriously injured?” Crump said.

Cox’s supporters say the police mocked his cries for help and accused him of being drunk. Video shows the officers dragged him by his feet from the van and placed him in a holding cell at the police department before paramedics finally took him to a hospital. Cox remains hospitalized and unable to speak because of his breathing tube.

Hundreds of protesters led by Crump, members of Cox’s family and the local NAACP staged a march late July 8 in New Haven to the city’s police headquarters. With many carrying signs and banners with Cox’s face and the hashtag #Justice4RandyCox, the crowd chanted slogans like “Randy Cox’s life matters,” “protect Black people” and “no justice, no peace.”

In this image taken from police surveillance video provided by New Haven Police, Richard Cox slides down the back of a police van while being transported after being detained by New Haven Police, on June 19, 2022, in New Haven, Conn. Cox’s family met with Justice Department officials, Friday, to discuss possible federal legal action. (New Haven Police via AP, File)

Using a bullhorn, Crump and others yelled to the marchers: “If I say my neck is broke.” In unison, they responded: “Don’t take it as a joke.”

The city announced a series of police reforms July 7 stemming from the case. The reforms include eliminating the use of police vans for most prisoner transports and using marked police vehicles instead. They also require officers to immediately call for an ambulance to respond to their location if the prisoner requests or appears to need medical aid.

Cox’s family said they appreciate the gesture but want more to be done.

“Why do you need a policy that says if someone needs help for you to give them help?” Latoya Boomer, Cox’s sister, said. “That should never have to be a policy. That should be in your own brain already.”

Five members of the New Haven Police Department who were involved in the transport remain on leave while the episode is investigated.

“I — slash we — want them fired and arrested, and I’m going to keep saying it until it happens,” Boomer said.

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