Standing in his Seattle law office Friday, attorney Edwin Budge read the warning label printed in all capital letters on the package of a TranZport Hood, the brand name of a kind of “spit hood” police and corrections officers place on detainees to prevent them from transferring body fluids or biting. “Warning: improper use of TranZport Hood can cause injury or death,” Budge said, reading into the phone. “Improper use may cause asphyxiation, suffocation, or drawing in one’s own fluid.”

Spit hoods like the one Budge described are under fresh scrutiny after body camera footage released Wednesday showed police in Rochester, N.Y., place a hood over 41-year-old Daniel Prude during a March arrest. Across the United States, the hoods have been cited for wrongful death or serious injury during arrests or in detention settings.

Prude was handcuffed, hooded and forced to the ground before an officer put his knee to his back for at least two minutes. Video shows Prude – whose family said he was in the midst of a mental health crisis – eventually fall silent and go limp. He was taken to a hospital and was removed from life support a week later.

“The hoods boil my blood more than any other type of police force used because of the inevitability of harm again someone who is mentally ill, vomiting or on drugs. [Hoods] induce panic: it’s like something out of Abu Ghraib,” said Budge, whose practice focuses on custodial deaths and excessive police force.

He has litigated and settled multiple cases where spit hoods were a factor in someone’s injury or death, including a case that led to a 2015 settlement that was reported at the time to be among the largest ever for a Seattle police use-of-force complaint.

Spit hoods, sometimes called spit socks or spit masks, are most often used in prison environments and on suspects in police custody, said Geoffrey Alpert, a criminal justice professor at the University of South Carolina. He said hoods have been used for decades – including “in prisons and torture chambers” – but grew more common in legitimate use during the 1980s at the height of the AIDS epidemic.

Alpert likened the negative outcomes with hoods in recent decades to the way car crashes are often described as ‘accidents’: “They’re not really ‘accidents’ – there’s human error and mechanical error. With spit masks, it’s the same.”

There is no apparent national or industry standard for manufacturing of hoods; Alpert said is unaware of any national training best practices for instructing police on how to use them and the extend to which any policies exist, they’re specific to individual departments.

He said many police agencies keep hoods on hand – “maybe thrown in the trunk” – but doesn’t believe they’re widely used. “You never hear about them unless they don’t work,” he said.

It is unclear which company’s hood Rochester police used on Prude; the department did not immediately respond to questions about the make of spit hood the department uses, if officers are required to be trained on how to use them and what, if any, written protocols exist around their use.

Alpert said different hoods are designed for different settings, with thicker and less permeable ones being more common in corrections settings where someone is seated upright and restrained or being transported to court. More transparent ones that resemble a mosquito net or a beekeeper hood are better used in police restraint situations where a suspect may be under high stress and positioned in a way where they can’t breathe as easily.

“Anytime someone is placed under a hood, they have to be monitored regularly and even more so in a police restraint situation when officers are applying any kind of pressure to someone,” he said.

“The whole compression asphyxia thing is huge. Once you’re controlled, you have to be rolled over,” he said, noting, “And if you have a mask, I can’t see your condition change, if your lips are turning blue, if you’re throwing up and breathing.”

Alpert stressed that being spit on is an understandably aggravating experience.

“I’ve talked to a lot of cops who have been spit on, and they tell me it’s just the most disgusting thing,” he said. Ultimately, though, police must be “the adult in the room” and monitor the safety of someone who may have just attacked them. “The response (by police) can’t be disgusting – the response has to be restraint.”

Anthony Romanucci, one of the lawyers representing Prude’s estate – he is also co-counsel in the George Floyd case – said that spit masks can be used in a manner that is consistent with good police practice measures.

“When police officers are properly trained on them, are appropriate tactical device,” Romanucci said of hoods. “When they’re not trained, and are cold and careless, that’s a contradiction to policy, I’d suppose.”

In the video, Prude is seen responding to officers and saying “yes sir” as he laid on the ground, naked, and put his hands behind his back to be handcuffed. Several minutes into the video, an officer quickly places a spit hood over Prude’s head. After several minutes, while sitting up, Prude yells “take this off me” and spits several times from under the hood. When he tries to rise, the officers restrain him facedown. One officer places his knee on Prude’s back while another presses his head to the pavement.

Moments later, an officer noticed Prude, still wearing the hood, had vomited. The Monroe County Medical Examiner ruled Prude’s death a homicide caused by “complications of asphyxia in the setting of physical restraint.”

“What stands out in this instance is that extra monitoring should be provided,” Romanucci told The Post. “The man wasn’t breathing. He stopped talking. He was predicting his own death, and no one bothers to check on him. And that’s not good policing.”

Prude’s family is preparing to file a civil suit against the Rochester police pending the outcome of an independent investigation.

Budge, the Seattle-based attorney, said the Prude situation underscores the need for a national standard around the manufacturing and recommended use of spit hoods in police and prison settings. Regulations would not only save lives, but would provide a measure of protection for police, he said.

“I have sympathy for the work the police do, and I think very often the problem when you see a tragedy like Mr. Prude, lies at the top of the department,” Budge added. “It’s so difficult seeing these officers being put in these situation without proper training or with tools that can result in such terrible outcomes.”


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