Houston Chronicle Sunday

Chicago officer cleared in fatal shooting case

Independen­t review rules evidence supports claim suspect was armed

- By Dan Hinkel

CHICAGO — An independen­t police review agency has determined that a Chicago police officer was justified in fatally shooting 25-year-old Ronald Johnson III in the back in October 2014.

In a ruling released Friday evening, the Independen­t Police Review Authority, which investigat­es shootings by police, said officer George Hernandez was justified in shooting the African-American man as he ran from police because evidence supports officers’ contention that he had a gun.

Conflictin­g statements

Attorneys for Johnson’s family have alleged that officers planted the gun and conspired to cover up the truth about Johnson’s shooting on the South Side.

The review agency ruled that the prepondera­nce of the evidence indicated that Johnson was armed and that Hernandez reasonably believed he was a threat. Witnesses gave conflictin­g statements, the ruling said, but investigat­ors recovered a Browning 9 mm pistol with grass and Johnson’s blood on it beneath his hand.

The report says agency officials do not believe that all shootings of people fleeing with guns would be justified.

“In this case, there are specific and numerous circumstan­ces that make such use of force reasonable,” the report said.

An attorney for Johnson’s family could not be reached for comment.

Video of the shooting was released late last year just after the city was forced to release video of Officer Jason Van Dyke shooting black teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times.

The McDonald video led to sustained protests fueled by long-standing grievances about police conduct, particular­ly among African-Americans, and the U.S. Justice Department is continuing to investigat­e whether Chicago police have systematic­ally violated citizens’ rights.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel, meanwhile, has tried to stay ahead of federal authoritie­s by announcing a series of reforms.

In the McDonald case, Van Dyke is charged with murder, but Cook County prosecutor­s declined to press charges in Johnson’s shooting. Scuffle after party

According to prosecutor­s, early on Oct. 12, 2014, Johnson and others left a party before a gunman shot out the rear window of their vehicle.

Later, police saw Johnson running with a gun in his right hand, and officers pursued him, prosecutor­s said. He was confronted by an officer who tried to arrest him, but a scuffle ensued, and Johnson broke free as the officer fell to the ground, according to prosecutor­s.

Then Hernandez arrived, and video showed he opened fire about two seconds after leaving his car as Johnson ran toward a park with his back to officers.

Two of the five shots struck Johnson, one in the back of his shoulder and the other in the back of the leg, autopsy reports show.

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