Houston Chronicle Sunday

Marchers mourn man killed by police

Event held a day after videos of shooting released

- By Julie Watson and Elliot Spagat

EL CAJON, Calif. — Alfred Olango, the unarmed black man shot and killed by police in a suburb of San Diego, was remembered in a demonstrat­ion Saturday organized by clergy members and supporters of Olango’s family.

Several hundred people gathered peacefully at a park in downtown El Cajon to hear speeches by religious leaders and then marched through the streets to police headquarte­rs, where Olango’s family members joined them.

“Mourning is a public sharing of grief, and his unnecessar­y killing has rent the fabric of our human community yet once again and we are feeling it deeply in our hearts,” said Rev. Frank Placone-Willey of Summit Unitarian Universali­st Fellowship in nearby Santee, Calif.

Olango’s father, Richard Olango Abuka, called for the resignatio­n of the police chief and said his son’s death is a turning point in a peaceful struggle to change police practices. Other speakers demanded changes in how police respond to calls about people in mental distress.

There was a modest police presence.

The event came a day after two videos of the shooting were released by authoritie­s, something the family and community leaders had urged.

The videos show the officer fired four times at close range almost immediatel­y after Olango, 38, suddenly raised both hands to chest level and took what was described as a shooting stance. In addition to the videos, police showed the 4-inch electronic cigarette device Olango had in his hands when he was shot.

The shots came less than a minute after police arrived at the scene in response to Olango’s sister calling 911 and reporting he was acting erraticall­y.

The videos were released after nights of unruly and, at times, violent protests in El Cajon. On Thursday night, an officer was struck in the head by a brick hurled by a protester.

Police Chief Jeff Davis defended the release of the videos and said it was intended to de-escalate tensions and correct what he felt was a “false narrative” that was developing. Some witnesses said Olango had his hands in the air and was begging not to be shot.

“Our only concern at this point was community safety,” Davis said. “We felt that the aggression of some — some — of the protesters was escalating to the point where it was necessary to release some informatio­n and truly, it was my hope to relieve some of that concern.”

A fourth night of protests on Friday remained peaceful, with about 200 people blocking intersecti­ons and at one point attempting to walk on to a freeway before police stopped them.

A lawyer for the family said they welcomed the release of the videos, but he questioned the tactics used by officer Richard Gonsalves. Olango had been reported to be mentally disturbed and unarmed and yet Gonsalves approached with his weapon out, Dan Gilleon said.

“It shows a cowboy with his gun drawn provoking a mentally disturbed person,” Gilleon said.

The incident is the latest in a series of fatal shootings of black men that have roiled communitie­s across the U.S. It came weeks after fatal shootings by police in Tulsa, Okla., and Charlotte, N.C.

Olango, a Ugandan refugee who arrived in the U.S. as a boy, had a criminal record that included drug and weapon charges but no violence. His family described him as a loving father and a joyful person.

His mother said he suffered a mental breakdown recently after the death of his best friend.

 ?? Denis Poroy / Associated Press ?? Winnie Olango, center, is consoled before a march Saturday in reaction to the fatal shooting of her brother, Alfred Olango, by police in El Cajon, Calif.
Denis Poroy / Associated Press Winnie Olango, center, is consoled before a march Saturday in reaction to the fatal shooting of her brother, Alfred Olango, by police in El Cajon, Calif.

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