January 27, 2026
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No Charges for 7 Haverhill Officers in Prone‑Restraint Death

Essex District Attorney Paul Tucker said Tuesday that seven Haverhill, Massachusetts police officers will not face criminal charges in the July 11, 2025 death of 43‑year‑old Francis Gigliotti, who became unresponsive while being held prone outside a fish market during what relatives described as a mental‑health crisis. Tucker said an autopsy found Gigliotti died from cardiac dysrhythmia in the setting of combined cocaine and alcohol intoxication while being restrained face‑down, and noted the medical examiner found no injuries to his nose, throat, neck or back, though there were bruises on his limbs. Witness video shows multiple officers holding Gigliotti on his stomach as he cries out; Tucker said they kept him prone for 2 minutes and 25 seconds before he went unresponsive, then administered Narcan and CPR until EMS arrived. The case drew scrutiny because officers were not wearing body cameras and because federal guidance has warned since the 1990s that prolonged prone restraint can cause asphyxia, an issue thrust into national focus by the killing of George Floyd in neighboring Minnesota. Tucker framed the review — which included an outside expert — as "comprehensive" and said the evidence could not support criminal charges under Massachusetts law, a conclusion likely to be challenged by civil‑rights advocates who argue prone holds remain dangerously overused in mental‑health and intoxication encounters.

Police Use of Force and Accountability Courts and Prosecutors

📌 Key Facts

  • Essex DA Paul Tucker announced January 27, 2026 that seven Haverhill officers will not be charged in the July 11, 2025 death of Francis Gigliotti.
  • Gigliotti died after being restrained face‑down for 2 minutes and 25 seconds outside a Haverhill fish market during what his fiancée called a mental‑health crisis.
  • The autopsy cited cardiac dysrhythmia in the setting of cocaine and alcohol intoxication while prone, with no injuries to the nose, throat, neck or back and bruises limited to arms and legs.
  • Officers had no body cameras; bystander video shows several officers holding Gigliotti prone as he cries out but does not show the full duration of the restraint or the moment he became unresponsive.
  • Tucker said officers later administered Narcan and CPR, and relied on an independent expert in concluding criminal charges were not "supportable."

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