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L.A. police chief: Man killed on Skid Row reached for gun

ASSOCIATED PRESS
Los Angeles Police detective Meghan Aguilar explains images released by police that could indicate evidence of a suspect holding a police officer's gun, seen in a video shot by a witness at the scene of the shooting of a homeless man on Skid Row of Los Angeles, top row left, at a news conference at police headquarters Monday, March 2, 2015.

LOS ANGELES » Police fatally shot a homeless man on Skid Row during a "brutal" videotaped struggle in which a rookie officer cried out that the man had grabbed his gun, the Los Angeles police chief said Monday.

Video showed the man reaching toward the officer’s waistband, Chief Charlie Beck said. The officer’s gun was found partly cocked and jammed with a round of ammunition in the chamber and another in the ejection port, indicating a struggle for the weapon, Beck said.

"You can hear the young officer who was primarily engaged in the confrontation saying that ‘He has my gun. He has my gun,’" Beck said. "He says it several times, with conviction."

Then three other officers opened fire.

The man was black, as is the rookie officer who was just short of completing his probationary year on the force, police said.

Beck’s narrative of the shooting, including photos from video showing the condition of the gun, was rare, emerging just 24 hours after an officer-involved shooting. It came amid heightened attention to killings by police officers that have led to protests, some violent, across the country.

Sunday’s violence had echoes of the August police shooting of 25-year-old Ezell Ford, whose death in a struggle with LA officers brought demonstrations in the city. Ford was unarmed. Police said he was shot after reaching for an officer’s gun.

Mayor Eric Garcetti said he and the police chief needed to respond quickly to reassure residents that there is a robust investigation into the shooting, which occurred in the downtown area that is home to the city’s highest concentration of homeless people.

"I watched the video. I watched the tragic events on Skid Row unfold," the mayor said. "We owe the city a thorough investigation as to what happened."

Video of the shooting was caught from multiple perspectives, including two witnesses recording from their phones and cameras worn by two of the officers who fired their weapons. The American Civil Liberties Union called on the Police Department to quickly release footage shot by the officers’ body cameras.

Beck said the incident began when officers arrived to investigate a reported robbery and the suspect refused to obey their commands and became combative.

A security camera outside a homeless shelter about 75 feet away showed the suspect pushed over a neighbors’ tent and then the two engaged in an altercation. Paramedics showed up before police. When officers arrived, they tried to speak to the suspect, who was standing near the entrance of his tent.

The suspect then turned and jumped into his tent, and officers appeared to pull it up and over him in an attempt to roust him from inside. The suspect jumped out of the tent flailing, kicking and spinning in circles before ending up on the ground.

Beck said officers were in a tough situation and didn’t know if the suspect was arming himself. Stun guns fired at the man had "appeared to have little effect and he continued to violently resist," Beck said.

One witness began filming from a closer perspective. The cellphone video posted to Facebook has drawn millions of views.

As the man took swings, four officers wrestled him to the ground. Two other officers subdued and handcuffed a woman who had picked up a dropped baton.

The struggle became blurry and distant, but shouting could be heard, followed by five apparent gunshots.

Exactly what happened in the last moments of the struggle is unclear. The weapon of the young officer who yelled "he has my gun" was in a specialized holster with a rotating hood, designed to make it more difficult for someone to take it away, according to pictures provided by the LAPD.

On Monday, a memorial sprung up where the shooting occurred. White roses were placed over a tent, blankets and clothing belonging to the dead man known as "Africa."

James Attaway, 48, said the man’s first name was Shawn, but he nicknamed him because he was from Africa, though he had family in Boston. They met six months ago, and Attaway said they slept near each other.

Africa had been living on the street for about a year, Attaway said. They met talking about God and had done that earlier Sunday.

"He was on the spiritual side, very intelligent," Attaway said.

Tents and cardboard shelters cover the sidewalks of Skid Row, where an estimated 1,700 homeless people live. Many of them struggle with mental illness and addiction and are no strangers to the police.

Cmdr. Andrew Smith said the man had previous encounters with officers, though he would not elaborate. Authorities withheld the man’s name.

The three officers who fired their weapons were veterans of the beat and had special training to deal with the homeless and mentally ill.

"They were trained to work with homeless," said Police Commission President Steve Soboroff. "It wasn’t a SWAT team looking for problems."

The shooting is being investigated by the Los Angeles Police Department’s inspector general and the city’s district attorney.

Activists called on Gov. Jerry Brown to appoint a special investigator to examine the killing.

Earl Ofari Hutchinson, head of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable, urged the city Police Commission to hold a special hearing on use of force by officers in Skid Row.

Two of the officers suffered minor injuries in the scuffle, including the rookie officer, who is on crutches. All four officers were placed on paid leave.

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