On March 14, seven Henrico County deputies were charged with
second-degree murder. Two days later, three hospital employees were also charged with murder. A preliminary autopsy found Otieno's cause of death to be
asphyxiation by smothering. On April 3, the
Office of the Chief Medical Examiner of Virginia confirmed the death as
a homicide and induced by
positional and mechanical asphyxia with restraints. On March 20,
The Washington Post obtained and released surveillance videos of Otieno's death. The video shows Otieno being taken into the hospital on March 6 around at 4:16pm in handcuffs and
legcuffs and entering the admissions area at 4:19pm. Just before 4:28pm, according to the
Washington Post, he "appears to make a movement" and deputies and hospital staff restrain him, with eight people on top of him and others helping to hold him down. At 4:40pm they release him and according to the
Washington Post he "appears not to be moving". At 4:41pm he is given an injection and resuscitation efforts start; at 5:48pm a hospital staffer covers his body with a sheet. In April, the prosecution filed a
joinder motion which was rejected the following month for at least two of the accused hospital workers. In June, the charges against two of the hospital workers were dropped, as their trial had been kept separate from the others and the footage did not provide strong evidence against them. == Aftermath ==