Weekend Herald

Black teen’s death keeps heat on police

Witness accounts at odds with the officer’s version of events, say boy’s family

- Laila Kearney Manhattan knife attack Meranti kills 10 in China

A white Ohio policeman responding to reports of an armed robbery fatally shot a 13- year- old black boy after he pulled out what appeared to be a weapon that was later determined to be a BB gun, police said yesterday.

Tyre King was shot multiple times in an alley when he drew what appeared to be a handgun from his waistband during a confrontat­ion with officers on Thursday in Columbus, the state capital, police said.

“We consider it a tragedy when something like this happens,” Columbus Police Chief Kim Jacobs said at a news conference. “This is the last thing any police officer wants.”

Jacobs identified the officer who shot King as Bryan Mason, a nine- year veteran.

Mason was placed on temporary administra­tive duty, pending an internal investigat­ion. Police identified the victim as Tyre King.

The family said in a statement released by a Columbus law firm that it retained to investigat­e the shooting that “numerous witness accounts are in direct conflict with the officer’s version of events”. The family also said reports of King’s actions before the shooting were allegation­s only at this point and called for an independen­t investigat­ion.

“The family is obviously distraught by the murder of Tyre,” lawyer Chanda Brown said in the statement, which described Tyre as a t ypical 13- year- old boy who was active in football, soccer, hockey and gymnastics. “They are shocked and indicate the actions described by the police are out of his normal character.”

King’s death comes nearly t wo years after the fatal shooting of 12- year- old Tamir Rice, who was black, by a white Cleveland, Ohio police officer who was responding to reports of a suspect with a gun in a city park.

An investigat­ion revealed that Rice, who died a day after the shooting, had been seen holding a replica gun that shoots plastic pellets.

Rice’s death became a rallying point for the Black Lives Matter movement and one of a number of deaths that led to nationwide demonstrat­ions against the use of excessive and sometimes deadly force against minorities, especially young black men, by police officers.

On July 5, police shot dead 37- yearold Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, while 32- year- old Philando Castile was fatally shot by police in St Paul, Minnesota, a day later.

In King’s death, detectives retrieved the weapon from the scene of the shooting and later determined it was a BB gun, which shoots small round pellets, with an attached laser, police said.

“It looks like a firearm that could kill you,” Jacobs said, as she held up an image of the same type of BB gun.

The incident began just before 8pm on Wednesday local time when police responded to reports of an armed robbery. The victim told officers that a group of males had demanded money, threatenin­g him with a gun, police said.

A short time later officers found three males, including King, matching the descriptio­ns of the suspects, police said. While attempting to question them, King and another male fled into an alley.

Police followed and Mason shot King after he pulled what appeared to be the handgun from his waistband, police said. King was transporte­d to the Nationwide Children’s Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

The second male who ran into the alley was interviewe­d by police and released. Additional suspects were being sought.

The Columbus Dispatch newspaper identified the second male as Demetrius Braxton, 19, who told the newspaper in an interview that he was with King for both the robbery and the shooting.

“I was in the situation. We robbed somebody, the people I was with,” Braxton said, according to the Dispatch.

Braxton told the paper that following the robbery the suspects were chased by police.

“The cops said to get down. We got down but my friend [ King] got up and ran,” Braxton said.

“He started to run. When he ran, the cops shot him.”

Braxton told the paper that King was shot four or five times, asking “Why didn’t they tase him?”

A grand jury will ultimately decide whether the officer should face criminal charges, the police chief said.

“These are crushing circumstan­ces for everyone,” Columbus councilman Mitchell Brown said. “Let the process work.” World population growth is a bigger problem than climate change, French presidenti­al candidate Nicolas Sarkozy has said, pouring more fuel on a fire he ignited this week when he appeared to downplay man- made climate change. Sarkozy, acknowledg­ing on a late night TV talk show that climate change was “a very serious challenge”, said: “The real challenge is that of demographi­c change.” Earlier this week, the former head of state who is running for the centre- right Les Republicai­ns party nomination, was quoted in a weekly publicatio­n as saying: “Only man could be so arrogant to think that it is us who is changing the climate.” His mainstream conservati­ve rival, former Prime Minister Alain Juppe, for his part said he was “convinced that human activity bears a heavy responsibi­lity in the production of greenhouse gases and thus in global warming”. The Socialist Government slammed Sarkozy’s comment as a “serious strategic error”. Police chased a man wielding a meat cleaver through midtown Manhattan yesterday, then shot him on a crowded street after he hacked the face of an off- duty police detective who tried to tackle him, authoritie­s said. The man with the knife was shot at least twice and was hospitalis­ed in critical but stable condition, police said. The detective, who had been heading home in street clothes when he intervened in the chase, was being treated at the hospital for a 15cm gash from his temple to his jaw. The chase began on Broadway and ended about a block from Macy’s department store and Madison Square Garden, just as rush hour was getting underway. The world’s strongest storm this year killed at last 10 people in China when it hit the southeast coast, the Government says, as rescuers scour flooded streets and work crews struggle to restore power to more than a million homes. Typhoon Meranti had largely dissipated by yesterday afternoon, a day after it swept in from the Pacific Ocean, clipping the southern tip of Taiwan, and making landfall near the Chinese port city of Xiamen, in Fujian province. The storm killed seven people in Fujian and three in neighbouri­ng Zhejiang province. Eleven people were missing.

 ?? Picture / AP ?? Community members light candles during a vigil for 13- year- old Tyre King who was shot and killed by Columbus police.
Picture / AP Community members light candles during a vigil for 13- year- old Tyre King who was shot and killed by Columbus police.
 ??  ?? Columbus Police Chief Kim Jacobs holds up a photo showing the type of BB gun that police say Tyre King pulled from his waistband.
Columbus Police Chief Kim Jacobs holds up a photo showing the type of BB gun that police say Tyre King pulled from his waistband.

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