Law Enforcement–Perpetrated Homicides. Tom Barker

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Название Law Enforcement–Perpetrated Homicides
Автор произведения Tom Barker
Жанр Юриспруденция, право
Серия Policing Perspectives and Challenges in the Twenty-First Century
Издательство Юриспруденция, право
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781793601919



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were later dismissed—2013.

      Fear-Driven Police Homicides

      An officer fatally shot an unarmed Shreveport, Louisiana, man after he ­allegedly reached for the officer’s gun during a struggle with the officer—2011.

      An unarmed East Point, Georgia, man was shot and killed after making a “threatening gesture” toward officers conducting a “knock and announce” drug search warrant—2011.

      Houston officers responded to a home burglary, and three suspects fled when they arrived. One suspect was caught and then fatally shot when he allegedly attempted to take an officer’s gun—2012.

      An unarmed man was shot to death by two U.S. Marshals pursuing him for a probation violation. He allegedly tried to crash into their car—2012.

      A man who was stopped for a speeding violation allegedly attempted to choke the Alma, Arkansas, officer who was trying to handcuff him. The officer shot and killed him—2012.

      

      Two members of the U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force shot and killed a Vancouver, Washington, man through the windshield of his car when he “escalated the situation.”

      Suisun City, California man was killed after pointing a pellet gun at police—2013.

      Sonoma County Deputies were responding to a suspicious person call when they spotted a thirteen-year-old boy walking in a vacant lot. He was carrying what they thought was an assault rifle. The officers claimed that the boy disregarded commands to drop the weapon. One deputy fired eight rounds at the boy from 20 to 30 feet away, striking him seven times and killing him. The boy was carrying an airsoft replica of an AK-47 that fired plastic pellets. The district attorney ruled the homicide justified—2013.

      Two San Diego, California, shot and killed a man while serving a drug warrant. The man was shot when he allegedly reached for his waistband after he was ordered to show his hands—2014.

      Two Oak, Texas, officers shot and killed a mentally ill man who refused their orders to drop a screwdriver—2014.

      Eighteen-year-old Michael Brown was fatally shot to death after assaulting a Ferguson, Missouri, police officer and reaching for his weapon. The shooting and the alleged police overreaction led to nationwide protests and demonstrations and the Black Lives Matter movement—2014.

      Twelve-year-old Tamir Rice was killed. He held a replica gun. The shooting was controversial and lead to riots and demonstrations.

      A Texarkana, Texas, police officer shot and killed a mentally ill man who was holding an 8-inch metal spoon.

      Unjustified Shootings

      In August 2011, a Eutawville, South Carolina, police chief was charged with murder in the fatal shooting of a man who complained about his daughter’s traffic ticket. The white police chief was tried twice for killing the black man. Both trials ended in hung juries. A third trial was ruled out when the former chief pleaded guilty to misconduct in office and received a one year home detention sentence (CBS News, September 1, 2015).

      A Del City, Oklahoma, police captain was sentenced to four years in prison for manslaughter for the fatal 2012 shooting of an eighteen-year-old man after a short police pursuit (Dinger, February 5, 2014). Evidence at trial revealed that the police captain was under the influence of hydrocodone when he shot the teenager in the back as he ran away.

      A Garland, Texas, officer was charged with manslaughter after firing forty-one times at the driver of a thirty-minute pursuit with speeds up 100 miles per hour. The officer allegedly did not give the suspect time to comply before he started shooting—2012.

      

      Two Utah detectives shot and killed twenty-one-year-old Danielle Willard in 2012 after she allegedly tried to hit them with a car as she fled a drug buy. The district attorney ruled the shooting unjustified as their stories do not match the evidence. One officer has been charged with manslaughter, and the other was fired for an unrelated offense. Civil suits are pending (Jauregul, December 6, 2017).

      A former Fairfax County, Virginia, officer pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter in 2016 for the 2013 fatal shooting of a man during a domestic disturbance call (Jackson, April 18, 2016). The officer was initially charged with murder.

      A white North Augusta, South Carolina, Public Safety Officer was indicted for the felony shooting a black man after a police chase—2014.

      Two Albuquerque police officers were indicted for first-degree murder after shooting a homeless mentally disturbed man illegally camping—2014.

      A Missouri Highway Patrol trooper was charged with first-degree involuntary manslaughter when a boater he arrested and handcuffed fell into the water and drowned—2014.

      A white Norfolk, Virginia, police officer was indicted for voluntary manslaughter after shooting a mentally ill black man—twice in the back. Allegedly, the man threatened the officer with a small knife—2014.

      Non-Lethal Devices Homicides

      A Lake Arrowhead man died after being beaten and tased two dozen times by three San Bernardino County Sheriffs Deputies in August 2011.

      CAUSE OF DEATH: Sudden cardiac death due to conducted electrical weapon discharge.

      MANNER OF DEATH: Homicide

      Office of Medical Examiner: New

      The medical examiners report above set off a series of civil lawsuits.

      In 2012 a hospital called the police and asked for a welfare check of a man who had been discharged the night before for a brain seizure. The man called the hospital and threatened to harm himself. The responding officer, a Vermont State Trooper, fired a Taser into the man’s chest after the man made a “threatening move” toward him. The trooper was cleared of all charges (Davis, June 18, 2014).

      A three-hundred-pound Fort Worth, Texas, man died after being tased multiple times—2013.

      Park Forest, Illinois, police officers tased a man and shot him with five bean bag rounds. One of the rounds hit the man in the stomach and killed him. The officer was charged with felony reckless conduct—2013.

      

      An eighteen-year-old was spray painting the outside of vacant McDonald’s restaurant in Miami Beach, Florida, in 2013. When officers approached he ran off and ignored commands to stop. He charged toward an officer who shocked him with a Taser. He became unresponsive and died in the hospital.

      Deputies with the Mohave County, Arizona, Sheriff’s Office chased a motorcycle without a rear license. The rider became combative and was tased twice. He stopped breathing and died—2014.

      A Tamaqua, Pennsylvania, man died after being tased by several officers—2014.

      A Baytown, Texas, unarmed man died after being tased twice by a Chambers County Deputy. The incident was investigated by the Texas Rangers—2014.

      A Kansas City, Missouri, man died after being shocked by a Taser in 2014.

      Escambia, Florida County, deputies shocked a twenty-eight-year-old man until he lost consciousness. He died two weeks later—2014.

      Suicide by Cop

      Lakewood, Washington, officers shot and killed a woman in what appears to be an incident of “Suicide by Cop” when she pointed what turned out to be a BB gun at them and yelled “shoot me shoot me”—February 2011.

      A San Antonio man called a crisis hotline saying he was contemplating suicide. The police responded and found the man walking down the street with a handgun. He fired at the police, and they shot and killed him.

      A Vermont man wanted for a suspected home invasion was being chased at night on foot through a wooded area. He turned toward a Vermont State Trooper, took a shooter stance, and pointed a cell phone at the trooper. The trooper feared that the object was a gun and shot the suspect. The trooper administered first aid, called for an ambulance, and asked the man why he did what he did. The