Los Angeles Times

Video shows ‘execution’ by police, lawyer alleges

- By Matt Hamilton and Richard Winton

Graphic surveillan­ce video released this week shows a throng of Fontana police officers surroundin­g a legally blind and mentally ill man in a convenienc­e store before an officer opens fire, killing him.

The muted video of the Nov. 22, 2015, confrontat­ion was made public by lawyers for the man’s family and marked the latest in a series of recorded police shootings over the last few years that have generated debate about whether officers are too quick to use lethal force.

The case also highlights the struggles of law enforcemen­t agencies across the nation to deal with officer interactio­ns with mentally ill people. Several agencies, including the Los Angeles Police Department, have been working to develop ways to reduce violent encounters between officers and the mentally ill. An LAPD study released last year found that more than a third of the people shot by Los Angeles police in 2015 had documented signs of mental illness.

Several independen­t law enforcemen­t tactics experts who reviewed the Fontana video for The Times said Thursday that there are some issues that require further examinatio­n, including whether the officers faced an

immediate threat when they opened fire.

The San Bernardino County district attorney is reviewing the shooting.

The video shows multiple police officers cornering James Hall, 47, in the back of a Chevron gas station minimart, where police and the man engage in a brief standoff.

Hall appears to shift his weight between two counters near a soda fountain just before a police officer shoots and he collapses to the tiled floor.

The grainy surveillan­ce images appear to partly contradict the initial account of the Fontana Police Department, which described Hall as armed with a knife and advancing on officers before police shot him dead.

Lawyers for Hall’s family released the video online Wednesday, more than a month after filing a state civil-rights and wrongfulde­ath lawsuit against Fontana and its Police Department. The complaint also names 12 Fontana police officers allegedly involved in the shooting.

“It’s a disturbing video indictment of the officers,” said attorney Mark Geragos, whose firm is representi­ng Hall’s relatives.

“The video puts the lie to the obviously falsified police account of what happened. In fact, this was an execution,” he said.

The Police Department said in a statement Thursday that the officers had responded to a reported armed robbery and that Hall was armed with a rock and knife.

Citing the civil litigation, officials declined to provide further details.

“With this said, we can all recognize this was a tragic and unfortunat­e event for everyone involved. As such, our thoughts and prayers go out to the family and anyone impacted by this incident,” the statement said. “We have every confidence in the investigat­ive process and await the conclusion.”

According to the department’s initial account, police were called after the convenienc­e store’s clerk reported a possible robbery in progress and indicated that the suspect was “armed with a knife.”

Officers arrived at the Chevron gas station near Sierra and Slover avenues about 4:15 a.m. Police said Hall had a knife in one hand and a large rock in the other.

Authoritie­s said that police tried to coax Hall into surrenderi­ng but that he advanced toward officers, prompting the police to shoot him.

The lawsuit filed by Geragos and his firm offers a different account: that Hall, who was legally blind and suffering from schizoaffe­ctive disorder, was outside the convenienc­e store but came in at some point to browse. The complaint says Hall was known to be peaceful and that community members were “fully aware of his disabiliti­es.”

In the video, an officer is seen approachin­g with a drawn handgun, and four more police officers arrive, many drawing their weapons. One of the officers also had a police dog.

At different points in the video, Hall appears to have a small item in his hands, but it is difficult to distinguis­h in the grainy image. At times, he also appears to be emptyhande­d.

One of the officers fired a shot in Hall’s general direction, according to the suit. The police dog was also released, and one officer unsheathed his stun gun, the suit alleges.

Officers closed in on the man, and the combined effect startled Hall: “He ran to the rear of the convenienc­e store and cowered there,” according to the suit.

Near the row of soda fountains and adjacent to a wall of refrigerat­ors, Hall and police had a brief standoff. The video does not show him lunging toward any of the surroundin­g police officers.

One officer shot at Hall, who fell to the floor. About 10 officers swarmed with their weapons still drawn.

The lawsuit, filed in San Bernardino County Superior Court, alleges the police escalated a peaceful encounter with Hall into a conf lict that ended in the unlawful use of deadly force. The family’s attorneys argue in the lawsuit that police acted “in reckless and callous disregard for the constituti­onal rights” of Hall.

Some policing experts expressed concern about the shooting.

“I didn’t see any immediate threat to officers that justified the use of deadly force,” said Geoffrey Alpert, a University of South Carolina criminolog­y professor and expert on police use of force.

“There are going to be a lot of questions about this shooting,” said Ed Obayashi, a Northern California sheriff ’s deputy and a lawyer who advises counties on the use of force.

He said the video shows some efforts by officers to use less-lethal force in the form of a projectile launcher and a police canine unit. Obayashi believes the projectile launcher was discharged during the video and the dog at one point moved toward the man but then moved away.

“The canine is always the best option when comes to less-lethal force, and the question is why not use the canine to take him down? They deployed the canine at one point and then the dog backed off,” he said.

Obayashi agreed with Alpert that “the video shows no evidence that the suspect ever advanced toward the officers.” But both stressed that videos often don’t show the entire incident and that it will be up to investigat­ors to determine whether the officers’ actions were justified.

Seth Stoughton, a University of South Carolina law professor and former police officer, said another key question is whether police knew Hall had mental health issues.

Police department­s around the country are working on ways to de-escalate incidents with mentally ill people without resorting to lethal force.

Several incidents in which police fatally shot people generated national attention last year, including in El Cajon, Fresno and Charlotte, N.C. Those and other incidents sparked protests. The Fontana video runs nearly nine minutes and shows different angles within the convenienc­e store, but the timestamp indicates that the entire incident lasted more than 17 minutes. Portions of the final standoff at the back of the convenienc­e store were not recorded, leaving out minutes-long segments.

Geragos, the attorney for the family, said the video was not altered or edited by his firm. The store’s surveillan­ce cameras were motionacti­vated, recording only when enough movement triggered the camera, he said.

He faulted the officers for not using other less-lethal measures to get Hall out of the convenienc­e store.

“This is a classic example of doing the opposite of what you are trained to do,” Geragos said.

 ??  ?? SURVEILLAN­CE footage shows Fontana police entering a Chevron convenienc­e store on Nov. 22, 2015, after receiving a call about a possible robbery in progress.
SURVEILLAN­CE footage shows Fontana police entering a Chevron convenienc­e store on Nov. 22, 2015, after receiving a call about a possible robbery in progress.
 ??  ?? AN OFFICER fatally shot James Hall, 47, who police said had a knife and was advancing toward officers.
AN OFFICER fatally shot James Hall, 47, who police said had a knife and was advancing toward officers.

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