Federal Judge Dismisses Tennessee Seizure‑Death Lawsuit on Statute‑of‑Limitations Grounds
A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit accusing Bristol, Tennessee, police officers and paramedics of using excessive force and denying medical care to 23‑year‑old Austin Hunter Turner while he was having a seizure in 2017, ruling that the statute of limitations had expired before his mother filed suit in 2024. The judge sided with the city and first responders, who argued that because Turner’s mother, Karen Goodwin, witnessed officers using force during the incident, she had one year from that day under Tennessee law to bring her claims. Goodwin’s attorneys contend that an official autopsy blaming "multiple drug toxicity" and the absence of body‑camera footage in the record effectively concealed restraint‑induced asphyxia as the true cause, and say they did not learn this until AP reporters surfaced body‑cam video in 2023 and a forensic pathologist reviewed it; they plan to appeal, arguing families should get more time when they reasonably could not discover the real cause of death. The lawsuit says the video contradicts police accounts, showing Turner face‑down, handcuffed, shackled, with a spit sock over his head while officers and paramedics put significant pressure on his head and upper back, even though he was in the midst of a seizure and not punching or kicking. The case, one of more than 1,000 deaths identified by an Associated Press‑led investigation that followed use of force supposedly designed to be non‑lethal, underscores how delayed access to body‑camera footage and disputed autopsy findings can determine whether families ever get a hearing on the merits in federal court.
📌 Key Facts
- A federal judge on March 17, 2026, dismissed the civil lawsuit over Austin Hunter Turner’s 2017 death, ruling the statute of limitations had run out.
- Turner’s mother, Karen Goodwin, filed suit in 2024 only after AP reporters located and shared police body‑camera footage she had never seen.
- The complaint alleges the video shows Turner in a seizure, face‑down, cuffed, shackled, with a spit sock on, while police and paramedics applied significant pressure to his head and upper back, contradicting official accounts and an autopsy that blamed multiple drug toxicity.
- Goodwin’s attorney says a forensic pathologist concluded in 2023 that restraint‑induced asphyxia, not drugs, caused Turner’s death, and the family will appeal the dismissal on that basis.
📊 Relevant Data
In the Associated Press investigation of over 1,000 deaths from non-lethal police force between 2012 and 2021, more than 330 (about 32%) were Black people, compared to Black Americans comprising approximately 13% of the US population.
AP investigation reveals Black people bear disproportionate impact of police force — AP News
In 2020, Black individuals accounted for approximately 48.6% of arrests for murder and nonnegligent manslaughter in the US, compared to comprising about 13% of the population.
Arrests by offense, age, and race — Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP)
Bristol, Tennessee, has a population that is approximately 90.6% White and 3.1% Black, according to 2023 US Census data.
Bristol city, Tennessee - U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts — U.S. Census Bureau
📰 Source Timeline (1)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time