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Central Texas county approves $5M settlement over Javier Ambler’s death

Ambler died after deputies repeatedly used stun guns on him

FILE - In this file image made from a March 28, 2019, body-worn camera video provided by the Austin Police Department in Texas, Williamson County deputies hold down Javier Ambler as one of them uses a Taser on Ambler's back during his arrest. Ambler, a Black man, died in custody in 2019 after sheriff's deputies repeatedly used stun guns on him, despite his pleas that he was sick and couldn't breathe, according a report published Monday, June 8, 2020, by the Austin American-Statesman and KVUE-TV. The video was made on the camera worn by an Austin police officer who also showed up at the scene as Williamson County deputies were making the arrest. Commissioners in suburban Williamson County have approved a $5 million wrongful death lawsuit settlement with the family of Ambler. (Austin Police Department via AP, File) (Uncredited, Austin Police Department)

GEORGETOWN, Texas – A Texas county approved a $5 million wrongful death lawsuit settlement Tuesday with the family of a man who sheriff’s deputies shocked with stun guns after a 2019 chase that was filmed by the real-time police TV series “Live PD.”

Commissioners in suburban Williamson County, just north of Austin, authorized the settlement with the family of Javier Ambler, a Black man whose car deputies chased after trying to pull him over for allegedly failing to dim his headlights to oncoming traffic.

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Ambler, a former postal worker, died after deputies repeatedly used stun guns on him, despite his pleas that he was sick and couldn’t breathe, according to police body camera video and a June 2020 report by the Austin American-Statesman and KVUE-TV.

The two former deputies are awaiting trial on manslaughter charges and the county's former sheriff, Robert Chody, was indicted on evidence tampering charges in the case. All have denied wrongdoing.

Body camera footage showed Ambler telling the deputies he was not resisting and that he could not breathe because of heart problems.

Attorneys for Ambler's family said in a statement they hoped the settlement would send "a powerful message to law enforcement that ignoring a person’s pleas that they cannot breathe will no longer be tolerated.”

"Live PD" was canceled by the A&E Network last year. A&E has said its video never aired because of a policy against showing a death.

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