SWISS prosecutors have launched a criminal investigation following the death of a 39-year-old man of African origin who collapsed at a Lausanne police station shortly after being arrested. Authorities confirmed the man died less than an hour after his detention on Sunday night.
According to the Vaud regional Public Prosecutor’s Office, police had approached the man around 9:00 pm in central Lausanne after his behaviour suggested involvement in drug trafficking. He fled and resisted arrest but was eventually subdued and taken to a police station for questioning.
‘After the situation calmed down, the man was taken to the police station,’ the prosecutor’s statement said. However, he later became unwell and died before 10:00 pm, despite emergency resuscitation efforts.
The man’s nationality has not yet been confirmed.
Autopsy ordered as criminal probe begins
The Public Prosecutor’s Office confirmed that a criminal investigation has been opened to establish the circumstances surrounding the death. A post-mortem examination has been ordered and will be conducted by forensic pathologists, with additional analysis by crime scene specialists.
‘Further investigative measures are also under way,’ the statement added, though no details have been released about the officers involved or any preliminary findings.
The case was first reported by AFP and has sparked fresh concern over how Swiss police handle interactions with people of African descent.
Not the first death in Vaud police custody
According to Swiss agency Keystone-ATS, this incident marks the latest in a troubling series of deaths involving Black men in police custody in Vaud canton. Between 2016 and 2021, four Black men died following police interventions, leading to protests over police brutality and systemic racism.
Among the most high-profile cases was that of Mike Ben Peter, a 39-year-old Nigerian who died in 2018 after being pinned face-down by six officers during a violent arrest in Lausanne. He died of a heart attack in hospital hours later.
Although his death initially received little attention, it resurfaced in public discourse following the murder of George Floyd in the US in 2020. In 2023, all six officers involved in Ben Peter’s arrest were acquitted of negligent homicide, a ruling upheld on appeal.
Racial bias concerns grow across Switzerland
Two of the other custody deaths in Vaud ended with findings of self-defence, while one case remains unresolved. Sunday’s incident is likely to reignite debates about race, policing, and accountability in Switzerland.
Activists have long accused Swiss police forces of discriminatory profiling and the disproportionate use of force against Black residents and migrants. Human rights groups have called for independent oversight and clearer accountability mechanisms to address what they say is a persistent culture of impunity.
With investigations ongoing, the Lausanne incident is expected to remain under public and media scrutiny in the weeks ahead.