Houston Chronicle

‘We will march … until justice comes’

Outrage and grief abound at funeral for woman fatally shot by Baytown officer

- By Samantha Ketterer STAFF WRITER

Pamela Turner’s body on Thursday was heading back to Mississipp­i in a casket for one final trip home.

After Turner’s funeral service, her niece, Tomeka Johnson, tried to decompress while watching the news from the couch at her northwest Houston home. But there was no escape from the story of Turner’s shooting death. On the television news crawl, she read that the police officer who shot and killed her aunt had returned to duty.

“I don’t even know what to do anymore,” Johnson lamented.

Earlier in the day, Turner’s 90minute funeral had been a solemn, and at times, hope-filled, affair. Grieving family members shared memories – how Turner loved to cook, how she was great mother to her two children, how much she cherished her dog Chi-Chi, how she always gave to those in need. A gospel choir roused the attendees with uplifting hymns, and throughout, civil rights leaders appealed to the crowd with calls to action.

“We marched for Trayvon’s (Martin) case, and we marched for Eric Garner and we marched for Michael Brown,” said Rev. Al Sharpton, as he eulogized Turner and listed other police shootings that took the lives of unarmed black people. “And we will march to Baytown until justice comes to Baytown.”

The mourners could not ignore that the Baytown Police Department, just prior to the funeral, announced that the officer in Turner’s shooting already had returned to his job. While Juan Delacruz, an 11-year veteran of the force, is not back on patrol, he was placed on administra­tive duties on Monday after a standard three-day paid administra­tive leave, spokesman Lt. Steve Dorris said in an email Thursday morning.

The decision did not sit well

with several civil rights advocates at the funeral at Lilly Grove Missionary Church in south Houston.

“Law enforcemen­t officers are supposed to be keepers of the peace,” attorney Lee Merritt said. “They are intentiona­lly agitating this community.”

U.S. Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee called on the U.S. Department of Justice to open a civil rights investigat­ion into the shooting, and questioned whether Turner’s rights were violated under the Americans with Disabiliti­es Act. Turner had paranoid schizophre­nia, which her family believes was known by Delacruz and the Baytown Police Department.

“I believe there is no doubt there’s a federal question here,” Jackson Lee said.

The Harris County District Attorney’s Office Civil Rights Division is investigat­ing the shooting and will bring the evidence to a grand jury, authoritie­s have said. The Texas Rangers has taken over a parallel investigat­ion, while the Baytown Police Department is running a separate internal affairs investigat­ion to determine whether department policy was followed.

Turner was walking at her apartment complex in the 1600 block of Garth Road when she was approached by Delacruz the night of May 13. He said he was attempting to arrest her on open warrants when the two began to struggle. Delacruz shocked Turner with the Taser, after which he said the woman deployed the Taser against him. He fired five shots, Dorris said.

A bystander captured the encounter in a now-viral video, which showed Turner yelling that she was being harassed and that she just wanted to go home.

She yelled “I’m pregnant,” which police later said wasn’t true. The video showed Delacruz standing over Turner before he appeared to back away. Then, the five shots sounded.

Attorney Ben Crump, who is representi­ng Turner’s family, said that funeral directors had to reconstruc­t the 44-year-old woman’s face, because she was shot in the cheek in addition to shots in the abdomen and chest. Official autopsy results from Harris County have not been released.

Turner’s injuries were not visible, and funeral goers approached the casket, remarking how beautiful she looked. She laid in a white dress, with a lavender scarf tied in a bow around her neck. A bouquet of purple and pink roses and lilies cascaded over the lower half of her body.

“She looked like herself,” said Johnson, who works in a law office.

Other mourners seemed encouraged by the songs of the Lilly Grove Missionary Baptist Church Choir. When a cantor sang, “I’ll fight your battles if you would only trust me,” dozens stood up with cries of praise.

Turner’s daughter, Chelsie Rubin, later read the church a poem “Remember Me,” written by Anthony Dowson. She stood next to her brother, Cameron January, and told of a mother who always supported them in their endeavors.

Turner previously was a unit coordinato­r at Houston Methodist San Jacinto Hospital in Baytown before taking a leave of absence because of her health, her family said. Turner is scheduled to be buried on Saturday in Fayette, Miss.

“It’s really hard for us, but I know she’s looking down and she’s watching us and she’s proud,” Rubin said. “She’s proud of how strong we’re being. I love you, mom. I love you so much.”

Antoinette Dorsey-James, who described herself as a “second mom” to Turner, said that Turner had a good relationsh­ip with God and is already reunited with him in heaven. Her message of mental health awareness will continue, she said.

“Pam was only existing on this earth,” Dorsey-James said. “Now, she lives.”

 ??  ?? Turner
Turner
 ?? Godofredo A Vásquez / Staff photograph­er ?? The Rev. Al Sharpton, who eulogized Pamela Turner, touches her casket before it’s placed into the hearse following the funeral service at Lilly Grove Missionary Baptist Church.
Godofredo A Vásquez / Staff photograph­er The Rev. Al Sharpton, who eulogized Pamela Turner, touches her casket before it’s placed into the hearse following the funeral service at Lilly Grove Missionary Baptist Church.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States