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Man Dies After Arrest at Aurora Motel

Seattle police are reviewing the arrest of a 48-year-old man who collapsed and later died after a confrontation with officers at an Aurora motel last week.

Family members of the 48-year-old man, identified as Christopher Wright Sr, say Wright never regained consciousness after he collapsed during the incident, and was taken off of life support Friday night.

According to a police incident report, officers were called to the Everspring Inn around 9:15 p.m. on February 28th after the motel manager heard a commotion on the building’s second floor and allegedly found Wright sexually assaulting a woman in a hallway.

The report indicates the manager pepper sprayed Wright while another staff member called police.

The report states that when police arrived and attempted to take Wright into custody, he “became assaultive and struck several officers,” and “was aggressive and belligerent, and his words were completely incoherent.” Officers Tasered Wright, handcuffed him, and brought him to a patrol car.

According to the report, Wright continued to struggle and tried to spit on several officers. As medics were treating the man, police say he showed signs of a drug overdose.

Wright was taken to Harborview where he died two days later.

Wright’s family members say they have no idea why he might have been at the Aurora motel on February 28th, and are still looking for answers about what led to the death of the 48-year-old father of four.

Wright’s brother, Reece Wright, Christopher had several medical conditions: Wright was HIV positive, and also suffered from asthma. “If someone sprayed stuff in his face he wouldn’t have been able to fight,” Reece Wright says.

According to SPD spokesman Sean Whitcomb, officers’ use of force is being reviewed as per department policy.

The King County Medical Examiner’s office has not determined the cause of Wright’s death and may not have a final report for 8-10 weeks.

Photo by Matt Mason




  • mb

    8-10 weeks for the final report from the King County Medical Examiner’s office?

    Just how does that break down?
    Week one: sit around with thumbs up asses.
    Week two: defrost body.
    Week three: perform autopsy.
    Week four: write report.
    Week five: receive guidance from SPD about how it should be written
    Week six: get approval to suspend medical ethics and rewrite as per SPD
    Week seven: edit autopsy report as per revised SPD guidance
    Week eight: revise again, same reason
    Week nine: let SPD write the final COD document
    Week ten: allow SPD to take you out to get drunk and try to forget the pain associated with getting bent over and reamed

    Seriously, 10 weeks? I understand that paperwork takes time (weeks four through nine), but WTFFF?

  • who cares

    Who the hell cares….
    Fact 1 – Scumbag tries to rape woman.
    Fact 2 – Scumbag is on drugs
    Fact 3 – Scumbag fights with cops
    Fact 4 – Cops do what they should do
    Fact 5 – Guy Dies
    Fact 6 – I’m moving on with my day because I don’t give a shit….

  • Anonymous Coward

    I believe some of the lab tests take longer in real life than they do on CSI. This time factors into the 8-10 weeks. It’s not just a bunch of people sitting around pushing paper.

  • enso

    Also keep in mind that unlike on TV, medical examiners aren’t just working on one body per week.