Los Angeles Times

Cleveland officer who killed Tamir Rice fired

A policeman who shot the boy is dismissed for lying on his job applicatio­n, and another is suspended.

- By Melissa Etehad melissa.etehad@latimes.com

CLEVELAND — The city of Cleveland on Tuesday fired the police officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice in November 2014 and suspended another officer after investigat­ions of the high-profile incident.

Police Chief Calvin Williams announced Timothy Loehmann was fired for having lied on his job applicatio­n and not disclosing that he had resigned from his previous position as a police officer in Independen­ce, Mo., to avoid being fired for insubordin­ation, emotional immaturity, dishonesty and mishandlin­g his gun.

The second officer involved, Frank Garmback, was found to have violated protocol when he drove a police car on grass during the incident. He has been suspended for 10 days and ordered to attend tactical training classes.

In Cleveland on Tuesday, the reason for the firing did not sit well with some.

“I am relieved Loehmann has been fired because he should have never been a police officer anyway,” Samaria Rice, Tamir’s mother, said at a news conference. “It does make a difference why he was fired. They fired him for lying on his applicatio­n. I wish they fired him for killing Tamir.”

City Councilman Jeff Johnson said that while “the community is in full agreement” over the firing of Loehmann, he was disappoint­ed the action wasn’t because of the killing.

“It’s still a feeling that justice has not totally been done in this case.… It’s like an open sore, and this is not going to help it fully.”

At a news conference, the police chief described the process of investigat­ing and punishing the officers as “fair and objective” and waved off criticism.

“There’s a 12-year-old kid dead,” Williams said. “People on both sides are going to say, it wasn’t enough, it was too much.”

Loehmann shot Tamir outside a recreation center after responding to a 911 call about a person sitting on a swing waving a gun. “There is a guy with a pistol.… It’s probably fake, but he’s pointing it at everybody,” the caller told the dispatcher. The dispatcher, however, didn’t tell the officers that the gun might be “fake” — a failure that resulted in the dispatcher being suspended for eight days earlier this year.

Tamir was sitting on a picnic bench under a gazebo when officers arrived at the scene, according to a video of the incident. The boy then walked out of the gazebo as the police car drove onto the grass and Loehmann got out. Seconds later Tamir was shot dead.

The weapon in his hand turned out to be a pellet gun.

The killing of a black boy by a white officer sparked protests in Cleveland and around the country as one of several cases that year that led to nationwide debate over police use of force.

The Cuyahoga County prosecutor’s office investigat­ed and in 2015 announced that Officers Loehmann and Garmback would not face criminal charges. In 2016, the city reached a $6-million settlement in a wrongful-death suit filed by the boy’s family.

It was a separate inquiry by the Cleveland Department of Public Safety that found Loehmann had been untruthful on his job applicatio­n when he joined the department the year before the killing.

It also found that Loehmann “possessed an ‘inability to emotionall­y function,’ ” that he did not follow “simple directions,” and he had failed to get hired at other police department­s.

 ?? Angelo Merendino Corbis ?? CLEVELAND POLICE officials discuss the fatal shooting by Officer Timothy Loehmann in November 2014. Some people objected Tuesday that the incident was not the reason behind Loehmann’s firing.
Angelo Merendino Corbis CLEVELAND POLICE officials discuss the fatal shooting by Officer Timothy Loehmann in November 2014. Some people objected Tuesday that the incident was not the reason behind Loehmann’s firing.
 ??  ?? THE KILLING of Tamir Rice, 12, by a white officer fueled a national debate on police use of force.
THE KILLING of Tamir Rice, 12, by a white officer fueled a national debate on police use of force.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States