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Police Misconduct — Death in Custody

The Death of Chinedu Okobi

County: San Mateo Severity: 8.2/10 Status: Settled — $4.5M DA: Stephen Wagstaffe

A 36-year-old Black man was tased 7 times by San Mateo County deputies during a jaywalking stop. He died of cardiac arrest. He was unarmed and carrying a bag. DA Stephen Wagstaffe declined to charge any of the deputies involved. Okobi was the fourth person to die after being tased by San Mateo County law enforcement in 2018 alone. Taxpayers paid $4.5 million.

7
Taser Deployments
$4.5M
Taxpayer Settlement
0
Deputies Charged
4th
Taser Death in County (2018)

What Happened

On October 3, 2018, Chinedu Okobi, a 36-year-old Black man, was walking across El Camino Real in Millbrae with a bag in hand. Deputy Joshua Wang spotted him crossing the street against a traffic light — jaywalking — and attempted to stop him.

Okobi's family said he struggled with mental illness and was having a breakdown that day. When deputies confronted him on the sidewalk, Okobi pulled away. Deputy Wang began tasing him. Okobi fell, tried to run, and punched Wang after the deputy swung a baton at him.

In total, Wang deployed his Taser on Okobi seven times. Deputies also struck him with batons and used pepper spray. Okobi went into cardiac arrest.

The San Mateo County coroner determined the cause of death was "cardiac arrest following physical exertion, physical restraint, and recent electro-muscular disruption." In plain English: the repeated tasing, combined with physical restraint, killed him.

This was not an isolated incident. Okobi was the fourth person to die after being tased by law enforcement in San Mateo County in 2018 alone.

Key Players

District Attorney
Stephen Wagstaffe
Declined to charge Deputy Wang or any other deputies involved. Found their use of force "reasonable under California law." This is the same DA who has been in office for 48+ years and is currently prosecuting a squatter removal operator while declining to charge officers who killed an unarmed man during a jaywalking stop.
Deputy — Primary Use of Force
Joshua Wang
Deployed Taser 7 times on an unarmed man during a jaywalking stop. Also used baton strikes. The internal affairs investigation cleared him of wrongdoing.
San Mateo County Sheriff's Office
Investigating Agency
Internal investigation cleared all deputies. Later implemented reforms: limited Taser deployments to 3 times maximum, added implicit bias training, and equipped patrol cars with defibrillators. Reforms came after the death, not before.

Timeline

Oct 3, 2018
Chinedu Okobi stopped by Deputy Wang for jaywalking on El Camino Real in Millbrae
Oct 3, 2018
Okobi tased 7 times, struck with batons, pepper sprayed. Goes into cardiac arrest. Dies.
2018
Fourth person to die after tasing by San Mateo County law enforcement that year
Mar 2019
DA Wagstaffe declines to charge any deputies. Rules use of force "reasonable."
2019
Internal affairs investigation clears all deputies
Oct 2021
$4.5 million settlement quietly reached with Okobi's family
Feb 2023
Settlement made public

Outcome

Settlement
$4.5 Million — Paid by San Mateo County taxpayers

No criminal charges against any deputy. No officer fired. The county quietly settled for $4.5 million — paid by taxpayers, not by the deputies who deployed a Taser 7 times on an unarmed man stopped for crossing the street.

The sheriff's office later limited Taser use to 3 deployments maximum and added defibrillators to patrol cars. These reforms came because Chinedu Okobi died. They should have existed before he walked across El Camino Real.

Why This Matters

DA Stephen Wagstaffe decided that tasing an unarmed man 7 times during a jaywalking stop was "reasonable." The same DA is currently pursuing 7 felony charges against a squatter removal operator whose responding officer called the incident a civil matter.

The pattern is clear: in San Mateo County, law enforcement kills an unarmed man and pays zero consequences. A civilian enters a property with authorization from the owner and faces 7 years in prison.

Chinedu Okobi's name should be remembered every time Wagstaffe claims to serve justice.

Take Action

Hold These Officials Accountable

San Mateo County DA: (650) 363-4636 — Ask why no deputies were charged
San Mateo County Board of Supervisors: (650) 363-4653 — Demand oversight reform
San Mateo County Sheriff: (650) 363-4911 — Ask about use of force policies
CA Attorney General: oag.ca.gov/contact — Request investigation

Sources

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