CHESTERFIELD, Va. – Hundreds of mourners joined family and friends of Irvo Otieno Wednesday to celebrate his life and call for reform in mental health care for minorities in the wake of the 28-year-old’s apparent suffocation at a Virginia mental hospital earlier this month.

Otieno’s brother, Leon Ochieng, called him “the big brother I never had” even though Otieno was younger than him. Ochieng, who was coming home to the Richmond, Virginia, area to help his brother start his musical career when Otieno died on March 6, has vowed to fight for justice in the memory of Otieno. 

“Irvo’s life has given me purpose,” Ochieng said as he stood over the flower-draped casket of his brother. 

Otieno, whose family said he had long struggled with mental illness, died March 6 after he was pinned to the floor by sheriff’s deputies and others while being admitted to Central State Hospital in Dinwiddie County. Seven deputies and three hospital workers have been charged with second-degree murder in his death, and an investigation is ongoing.

Three days before his death, Henrico Police came to Otieno’s home investigating a burglary in which a neighbor claimed he was involved. When they got there, Otieno was in the midst of a mental crisis, and his mother was asking them to take that under consideration. Otieno was taken to Henrico Doctors Hospital for treatment and then, as his mother claimed, “whisked out the back door” of the hospital and taken to jail. 

Surveillance video released by the Dinwiddie County Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office showed Henrico deputies manhandling a lethargic and unmedicated Otieno in his jail cell. Later, video from the hospital showed the seven deputies and three hospital security guards atop him for 12 minutes, during which he reportedly suffocated. 

Otieno’s mother, Caroline Ouko, spoke to her late son directly in her remarks. She called him a “soldier” and “the man.”