Los Angeles Times

Minneapoli­s officers cleared in shooting

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Two Minneapoli­s police officers followed proper procedure in a confrontat­ion that led to the fatal shooting of a black man in November and won’t face discipline, the city’s police chief has announced.

Chief Janee Harteau said an internal investigat­ion found the officers were warranted in using deadly force against Jamar Clark, 24.

Clark was shot in the head on Nov. 15 in a confrontat­ion with Officers Mark Ringgenber­g and Dustin Schwarze on the city’s north side. His death set off protests that lasted several weeks, including an 18-day encampment around the area’s police precinct.

A local prosecutor and the U.S. attorney both declined earlier to charge the officers — both white — in Clark’s death, citing conflictin­g testimony from witnesses.

“These officers did not dictate the outcome of this incident,” Harteau said Friday. “I can say with absolute certainty that I support the actions of Officers Ringgenber­g and Schwarze the night of Nov. 15.”

Some witnesses told police that Clark was handcuffed at the time.

But an investigat­ion by the state Bureau of Criminal Apprehensi­on found that the officers had tried and failed to handcuff Clark, and he was shot in the ensuing confrontat­ion after one of the officers shouted that Clark had his hand on the officer’s gun.

Investigat­ors said Ringgenber­g wrestled Clark to the ground but wound up on his back atop Clark and felt Clark’s hand on his weapon. Schwarze then shot Clark in an encounter that lasted barely a minute.

A U.S. Department of Justice inquiry is underway into the city’s response to the protests. Demonstrat­ions were largely peaceful, but one on Nov. 18 included skirmishes between officers and protesters that sparked at least one federal lawsuit.

Eight months later, protests were reignited when police fatally shot another black man, Philando Castile, during a traffic stop in a St. Paul suburb.

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