Eimers rebuke draws angry response from two commissioners

 

BY PRU SOWERS

KONK LIFE STAFF WRITER

 

Tempers flared at Tuesday’s Key West City Commission meeting when homeless advocate Sloan Bashinsky accused the police of “murdering” Charles Eimers, drawing angry protests from two commissioners.

Bashinsky, a frequent contributor during citizen comments at commission meetings, had attended a candlelight ceremony Thanksgiving evening in memory of Eimers, who died one year ago after leading police on a slow chase around Key West following a routine traffic stop. Eimers stopped breathing after being handcuffed by police while his face was in the sand. He died without gaining consciousness a week later when his family removed him from life support .

Bashinsky, a former lawyer who was once homeless , accused the Key West police officers involved in the incident of treating Eimers roughly because they believed he was homeless. Eimers, who had just retired, was moving to Key West on Thanksgiving Day last year and had his belongings in the back of his car.

“He was not killed because he left a traffic stop. He was not killed because he posed a danger to the police officers. He was not killed because they feared for their lives,” Bashinsky said. “He was killed because they thought he was homeless.”

That was too much for Commissioner Mark Rossi to take. He angrily confronted Bashinsky, saying he was going to “stick up for” the police department.

“I’m not going to sit here. I’m not going to listen to that. You’ve got good people working for the Key West Police Department that care and do their job right,” he said. Several people in the audience applauded his remarks.

Bashinsky, clearly angry, returned to the microphone despite efforts by Mayor Craig Cates to cut him off. He walked away, only to shout, “You should all see the latest video of the bystander from Columbia. It shows them murdering that man.”

Bashinsky was referring to a second video taken on a witness’s telephone that shows Eimers bleeding from his ear with sand on his face. During the grand jury hearing on whether to criminally charge the officers involved, several officers testified they did not see blood or sand on Eimers. The grand jury, which did not see the second video, found all the officers innocent of any criminal activity, concluding Eimers died of a heart attack.

City Commissioners have been tight-lipped about the case, including the grand jury decision. But Commissioner Tony Yaniz also wanted to respond. He thanked Rossi “for having the stones” to say what Yaniz said he also believes.

“I support the Key West Police Department. Mr. Eimers died of a heart attack. The grand jury came back and decided they were not guilty of any criminal act,” Yaniz said. “To come out here and say the Key West Police Department killed somebody? I’m sorry. I can’t sit here, either, and accept that without telling you you’re full of it, Sloan.”

Commissioners Teri Johnston and Clayton Lopez also attended the Thanksgiving candlelight ceremony for Eimers. Johnston said she was attending as an individual, not a city commissioner.

“This was certainly a tragedy. I went out of respect for his [Eimers’] family,” Johnston said.

 

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