Thursday, March 22, 2018

SOME THINGS ARE JUSTIFIABLE BUT DON'T LOOK GOOD

by Bob Walsh

Stephen Clark, 22, was shot to death by the Sacramento P D Sunday night. It may be (so far I think probably was) justifiable but it doesn't really look good, in part because the cops fired 20 shots and it turns out he wasn't armed.

The local P D responded to a citizens call of somebody breaking into cars. The Sacramento P D actually responds to such calls. A S. O. helicopter also responded, and saw a man in a back yard nearby apparently breaking into the house. The cops responded. The chopper saw the guy run and directed the cops on the ground in their pursuit, which wasn't long. One house in fact. The back yard he landed in was his grandmother's house. He then moved along, looking into cars on the property. The dead guy had been staying with his granny off and one for about a month, ever since he got out of the slammer..

About this time the cops on the ground intercepted him, ordered him to stop and show them his hands. He turned and ran. The cops chased him (they get paid to do that). In the back yard he stopped and turned and advanced towards the cops with an object in his hands, pointing it at the cops. .At least two of the cops present fired. Clark died. No gun was found, but am IPhone was.

Clark is black. The family is asserting the cops shot him in the back, murdering him. None of them actually SAW the incident. The helicopter was filming. The officer's body cams were on.

They are not, so far, saying how many shots actually hit Clark.

If he has some bullet holes in his back and the video turns out to be inconclusive this could be bad. If, however, the preliminary story the cops told matches the video there will still be a stink, but that will be tough shit. Clark had four priors. He won't have any more. Being a professional criminal has its risks.
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THIS OH SHIT POLICE SHOOTING COULD COST SACRAMENTO PLENTY
Black man shot 20 times by police was carrying cellphone, not 'tool bar,' when he was shot, department says


By Benjy Egel, Nashelly Chavez and Anita Chabria

The Sacramento Bee
March 21, 2018

The 22-year-old black man fatally shot by Sacramento police in his own backyard Sunday night was carrying a cellphone, not a "tool bar," when confronted by officers, the department clarified late Monday.

Stephon Clark was killed in the backyard of the south Sacramento home he shared with his grandmother, grandfather and some siblings, his 25-year-old brother Stevante Clark said Monday. The police department said officers were responding to a call of a person breaking car windows nearby.

Police said they believed Clark was armed with a gun, though no firearm was found at the scene. Police said instead Clark had a "object" that he "extended in front of him" while advancing towards two officers.

Police were unable to immediately give details about the tool bar Monday, and did not identify the item in Clark's hand when he was shot as different from the tool bar until late Monday night. The department said it believed initial information released about the incident was clear that the object Clark was holding when shot was not the tool bar.

Police said Monday night they had concluded their on-scene investigation and the only item found near Clark's body was a cellphone.

Police said two items that could be the "tool bar" that deputies in the helicopter saw were recovered from near the broken sliding glass door in the neighbor's yard: a cinder block and a piece of aluminum similar to what might be used for a gutter.

On Monday, police said Clark used the tool bar to shatter a sliding glass door one house away from where he was shot. Police also said in a release that they believe Clark broke the windows of at least three nearby vehicles.

At 9:18 p.m. Sunday night, officers responded to a call that a thin, 6-foot-1 black man wearing a black hooded sweatshirt and dark pants was hiding in a residential backyard after breaking car windows, according to a department media release.

Sacramento County Sheriff's deputies circling the area in a helicopter spotted a man in a nearby backyard at about 9:25 p.m. and told police on the ground that he had just shattered a window with a tool bar then run to the front of that house and looked inside a car. The deputies in the helicopter began directing the officers on the ground to his location.

Officers entered the front yard of Clark's residence in the 7500 block of 29th Street and spotted him along the side of the house. Department spokesman Vance Chandler said the man tracked by the helicopter was the same person confronted by officers, who said they ordered him to stop and show his hands. That man was later identified as Clark.

Police said Clark instead fled from the officers toward the back of the property, where police said he turned and advanced toward the officers with an object in his hands.

"Fearing for their safety," the officers fired multiple rounds at Clark at 9:26 p.m., hitting him 20 times, the department said.

The two officers involved in the shooting then held their position for about five minutes until additional officers arrived before approaching the victim. Clark was pronounced dead at the scene.

Sequita Thompson, Clark's grandmother, said she was awake and sitting in the home's dining room when she heard four gunshots.

“The only thing that I heard was pow, pow, pow, pow, and I got to the ground," she said.

Thompson said neither she nor her husband heard police issuing commands prior to the shots being fired.

Thompson dropped to the floor and crawled to the spot where her 7-year-old granddaughter slept on the a couch in an adjacent den, telling her to get on the ground as well, she said.

Thompson then made her way to her husband, who uses a wheelchair to move around.

Thompson said it was normal for Clark and others to enter the home through the backyard because the front doorbell doesn't work and she and her husband, who is in a wheelchair, have poor mobility. People would knock on the back window and ask her to use an automatic opener to raise the garage door to admit them, she said.

Thompson said her husband called 911 to report the shots.

Police interviewed Thompson for several hours about what she had heard but did not tell her about Clark, she said. She eventually decided to look out a window and saw her grandson's body in her backyard, she said.

“I opened that curtain and he was dead," she said. "I started screaming.”

Both officers involved with the shooting were placed on paid administrative leave. One has been an SPD officer for four years, the other for two. Each had four years experience with other law enforcement agencies before joining SPD.

Body-camera footage of the shooting will be released within 30 days, per a city policy approved in November 2016.

Chandler said that video would include footage shot by Sacramento County Sheriff's deputies in the helicopter. The Sheriff's Department does not usually release video, but Chandler said the departments wanted to work "collaboratively."

The Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office, city attorney’s office and the city Office of Public Safety Accountability will investigate the shooting, as will SPD homicide detectives, internal affairs and Crime Scene Investigation units, he said.

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg said he supported the investigation and Sacramento Police Chief Daniel Hahn's "intent to expediate the release of all relevant video."

"I am always sorry when someone loses their young life," Steinberg said. "I am also grateful that the officers were unharmed."

A Sacramento High School alumnus with a fondness for sneakers, football and video games, Clark left behind two young sons, Cairo and Aiden, his family said.

Though his birth certificate read "Stephen," Clark altered the spelling of his name to differentiate it from that of his father, Stevante said.

Many friends also referred to him as "Zoe," short for Alonzo, his middle name.

Monday night, about 120 community activists led by Black Lives Matter gathered in front of the Meadowview Light Rail Station off of Meadowview Road for a vigil and protest. The crowd included family members and community leaders.

Sacramento Pastor Les Simmons, the former president of a police oversight commission who quit after the fatal shooting of a mentally ill black man in 2016, led a group of family members through prayer at the station’s parking lot.

“I think right now is a moment for our community,” he said afterward. “A moment to show real transparency.”

Tuesday afternoon, family, friends and activists planned to gather on the steps of the state capitol at 1 p.m.

A GoFundMe page to pay for Clark's funeral expenses was established Monday afternoon. Stevante Clark said the family wanted enough money to bury his younger brother next to another brother killed a few years ago, also by gun violence.

"He would not want for us to be sad but to come together," said the elder Clark. "He was a good person. He always had jokes for everybody."

5 comments:

bob walsh said...

The BLM thugs shut down I-5 during the evening commute on Thursday to protest this "police murder."

Dave Freeman said...

The Policeone site shows videos from both officers' body cams and also some footage taken by the police helicopter showing How this unfolded. (Quality of the second bodycam footage is much better than the first one if you are pressed for time). Looks like a justifiable shoot, but you won't get that from the media.

I mean...so what if he was breaking into cars at 4 am? So what if he ran from the police, then turned and advanced toward them with his hand extended as if about to shoot at them? Dude was a frequent flyer at the local jail and the unemployed father of two children with some chick he didn't bother to marry and living with his grandparents, but, from the press releases, you'd think the police just executed Gandhi.

Prayers for the two officers who, acting appropriately and in good faith in a moment of crises, now have to worry about whether or not they still have jobs to return to.

Dave Freeman said...

https://www.policeone.com/officer-shootings/articles/472600006-Videos-Sacramento-police-fatally-shoot-man-who-officers-believed-was-armed/

BarkGrowlBite said...

Dave, you mean he wasn't Gandhi? You coulda fooled me. But I do know that one of the two officers was black ... yes black!

Dave Freeman said...

One of the officers was black? Seriously? Funny the news media aren't mentioning that. I mean, the race of the dead thug is plastered all over the article. (On second thought, maybe it's not funny).