Los Angeles Times

Video surfaces in police killing of man

The recording shows Michael Anthony Perez reaching behind his back just before Orange officer fires.

- By Veronica Rocha veronica.rocha@latimes.com Twitter: VeronicaRo­chaLA

A new video depicting the moments before a fatal police standoff this week shows a motorist reaching behind his back just before a shot was fired.

The graphic video obtained by the Associated Press comes days after the bizarre standoff in a strip mall parking lot in Orange.

According to police, Michael Anthony Perez was driving a white GMC van about 11:15 p.m. Sunday when officers tried to pull him over for an inoperable tail light, as well as an active warrant associated with the license plate.

The 33-year-old Orange resident refused to stop, but eventually pulled into the parking lot in the 100 block of West Katella Avenue, police said.

He rolled down his window, and officers commanded him to exit the vehicle, but he refused, said Orange police Lt. Fred Lopez, a department spokesman.

Perez produced a fuel canister, then poured liquid onto a rag and lighted a cigarette.

0Officers could smell gasoline, so they moved toward the van, police said.

The 36-second video shows at least seven officers converging on the van — some with their guns drawn. The officers peered into the van, and one tried to open the driver’s door.

As two officers hit the van’s passenger windows with their batons, others used a fire hose to spray high-pressure water into the vehicle.

Seconds later, one of the passenger windows shattered and a torrent of water gushed out.

The video shows Perez crawling out of the driver’s window as officers continued to spray water.

When Perez fell onto the ground, an officer grabbed his left hand and held onto him. As several officers moved in toward Perez, a loud bang could be heard in the video.

The video shows Perez moving his right hand behind his back as the officer continued to yank on his left hand.

Perez appeared to swiftly move his right hand forward just before he fell to the ground and a shot was fired.

Lopez said Perez reached behind his back and “at some point, he brandished a knife.”

One officer “fired a single round, which struck the suspect in the upper torso,” he said.

Perez was taken to a hospital, where he was later pronounced dead, police said. Police described Perez as a man with an “extensive criminal history, which included weapons violations and narcotics.”

On Friday, Lopez said several videos showing the shooting have been turned over to the Orange County district attorney’s office, which is investigat­ing.

He declined to comment on the new video.

“Once the D.A.’s office has completed their investigat­ion and revealed their findings to us, we will reevaluate if an updated press release is appropriat­e,” Lopez said.

Susan Kang Schroeder, a district attorney’s office spokeswoma­n, said prosecutor­s will “evaluate every piece of evidence available.”

The investigat­ion could take a few months, she said.

Geoff Alpert, a criminolog­y professor at the University of South Carolina who has researched police procedures, said the officers’ use of a fire hose was creative and the least dangerous way to gain control of the situation.

Alpert said he couldn’t comment on the fatal shooting because he didn’t know if the officers felt threatened or if there was a risk to public safety.

“What was he doing with the knife?” Alpert said. “There are all sorts of questions.”

 ?? Clay Connell ?? MICHAEL ANTHONY PEREZ, 33, brandished a knife during a confrontat­ion with officers, Orange police said. He was shot once in the upper body.
Clay Connell MICHAEL ANTHONY PEREZ, 33, brandished a knife during a confrontat­ion with officers, Orange police said. He was shot once in the upper body.

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