Virginia police misinformed state investigators about their use of force against Linwood Lambert, a man who died after officers repeatedly tased him in a hospital doorway, according to files from a state criminal investigation.
The records, obtained exclusively by MSNBC, offer the first comprehensive look inside the open criminal inquiry into the 2013 incident. They may also provide new grounds for potential charges against police, according to some legal experts.
The inquiry into the tasing has remained open for so long – two and a half years and counting – that Virginia’s governor, attorney general and U.S. senators recently took the unusual step of urging the local prosecutor to finish the job.
The records offer new clues about that lengthy process, revealing a prosecutor who initially leaned against charges but sought a review of that call; state investigators who accepted police claims even when contradicted by videos of the tasing; and State Police officials increasingly pushing for a decision by the prosecutor, privately calling her “indecisive” and “unsure” about “what to do.”
In a new response to MSNBC, the prosecutor, Tracy Quackenbush Martin, said those state investigators “left questions unanswered that must be answered.” She stressed that while the investigation gathered facts, she is working “to assign value to those facts and draw legal conclusions.”
Since MSNBC first reported video of the tasing last month, there has been widespread criticism of the repeated use of tasers on Lambert, who was handcuffed and initially taken into custody for medical care.
After Lambert broke a police car window and ran towards a hospital in South Boston, Virginia, three officers discharged their tasers 20 times, despite federal guidelines against repeat tasings and local rules against tasing a restrained suspect. The officers have denied all wrongdoing in a related civil suit.
According to the newly obtained investigation files, Cpl. Tiffany Bratton, who discharged 15 of the tasings, told investigators when she tased Lambert, he “was lying on his back” and he “grabbed the end of the Taser and was pulling it.” She “stated this probably happened several times,” according to investigators.
%22If%20an%20officer%20credibly%20stated%20that%20a%20suspect%20was%20trying%20to%20get%20the%20Taser%20several%20times%2C%20than%20that%20would%20certainly%20justify%20elevating%20the%20force%20used%20by%20the%20officer.%22′
But the video does not show Lambert ever grabbing a Taser.
In addition, his hands were cuffed behind his back throughout the tasing – making such an action physically unfeasible.
Bratton also claimed the repeated tasings were needed because after Lambert was tased, he kept getting back up – four times in all.
A state investigator writes that once Lambert was first tased in the hospital doorway, Bratton said after about “five seconds” he “got back up.”
Then after a second tasing, she said “Lambert hit the ground then right back up.” After a third tasing, Bratton said “Lambert hit the ground then got right back up.” And after a fourth tasing, she said after 5 seconds – the standard length of a tasing – “he got back up.”
Another officer, Clinton Mann, told state investigators Lambert “jumped up” once after a tasing.
On the video, however, Lambert is never seen getting himself up on his feet after the first tasing.
Instead, the video shows his body went stiff and dropped after the first tasing in the hospital doorway. Then he mostly rolls around on the ground, according to the video, and asks the officers to stop. While he is on the ground, they also shackle his legs.
Bratton’s claims to investigators, now public for the first time, are legally significant for two reasons.
If prosecutors believed Lambert did repeatedly grab an officer’s weapon and get up after tasings, that alleged conduct might justify additional tasings.
“If an officer credibly stated that a suspect was trying to get the Taser several times, than that would certainly justify elevating the force used by the officer,” says Kendall Coffey, a former federal prosecutor.
So while Bratton’s claims are not supported by the video, the claims could provide an internal written record that would seem to cut against charging the officers. (There is no indication that police planned to release the video, or expected it to be made public during the 2013 investigation.)
Second, it is a crime to deliberately mislead state investigators, a separate charge that prosecutors could investigate.
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“In Virginia, it’s a Class 1 Misdemeanor – it carries up to 12 months in jail – for any person to knowingly and willfully make a materially false statement to any law enforcement officer investigating the commission of a crime,” said Steve Benjamin, a Virginia defense attorney.
That crime, obstruction of justice, covers “materially false statements” made to law enforcement officers “conducting an investigation of a crime.”
The Virginia State Police, which led the state investigation into the tasing, indicate Bratton made the claims to a law enforcement officer investigating the tasing, Agent Kevin George, in May 2013.
Benjamin said a claim about “whether the suspect was lunging for a taser” is material, and prosecutors would also analyze whether it was deliberately misleading.
Coffey, the former federal prosecutor, said “if an officer states to a police authority that the suspect was resisting – grabbing a taser – at the time the suspect was handcuffed, that’s serious matter. It certainly could be considered a charge for making a false statement,” he told MSNBC.
Rod Sager, who served as a federal prosecutor in Virginia for six years, told MSNBC a false statement made to investigators can also give prosecutors wide leverage in a case. “A potential false statement is always helpful,” he said, and can be used in cross examination “should that person go on trial and take the witness stand.”
The investigation file also includes a handwritten statement from Bratton, dated the day of the incident, which claims Lambert got up three times during the tasing, but does not claim he ever grabbed her Taser.
“Suspicious death”
While Bratton’s claims are contradicted by the videos, which show multiple angles of the entire tasing, the State Police investigation summary does not address those discrepancies.
Running slightly over two pages, the summary provides a terse and often incomplete synopsis, apparently relying more on the officers’ testimony than the video evidence.
The summary, now public for the first time, is dated October 23, 2013 and titled “Summary of Investigation Concerning Linwood Ray Lambert, Jr., Victim Suspicious Death.”
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It only uses two sentences to independently characterize the tasings:
“Officers utilized their tasers to subdue LAMBERT and took him back to the patrol car. LAMBERT was being uncompliant and would not stop resisting so officers used their tasers again in the rear seat of the patrol car.”
The reference to subduing Lambert does not mention the fact that officers shackled his legs before placing him in the car.
That detail is legally critical, since police rules prohibit tasing a restrained subject, and a shackled suspect is less likely to pose the kind of danger that justified continued use of force.
The investigators’ assertion that Lambert was “uncompliant” and “resisting” when put back inside the car is also relevant to the use of force. Jim Cavanaugh, a former ATF agent who reviewed the videos for MSNBC, said Lambert was largely unable to resist at that point in the car.
“He’s shackled to the maximum already, hands behind his back and his legs shackled, and he’s in the back of a locked patrol car,” said Cavanaugh, an NBC law enforcement analyst.
“There’s not much resistance you can offer — in attitude, maybe, but it’s not a resistance where he’s putting anyone in danger that would merit the using of an intermediate weapon like a taser,” said Cavanaugh.
While some of the summary’s statements could sound like legal conclusions, the State Police documents include a generic disclaimer stating that they do not contain “conclusions of the Virginia State Police.”
The investigation summary’s only other discussion of tasings is limited to counting the total tasings and reciting the officers’ defense of their use of force.
Tasing defense








