Los Angeles Times

Family of teen killed by deputies sues county

Lawmen used excessive force against Anthony Weber, suit says

- By Nicole Santa Cruz nicole.santacruz@latimes.com

The family of a teenager fatally shot by Los Angeles County sheriff ’s deputies in February has filed a civil rights lawsuit saying that deputies used excessive force and then accused the dead teen of having a weapon to justify the shooting.

In the three months since the shooting, attorneys for the parents and 1-year-old daughter of Anthony Weber said the L.A. County Sheriff ’s Department has not released additional informatio­n about the incident, including the 911 tapes, dispatch recordings or the identities of the deputies. Sheriff’s officials have placed the results of an autopsy on hold, blocking the coroner’s office from releasing informatio­n.

“The aim of this lawsuit is to uncover and expose the code of silence in this case and reveal the true facts of what happened,” Gregory Yates, an attorney for the family, said at a news conference Wednesday. Yates said attorneys filed the lawsuit to gain more informatio­n about the shooting. “The family doesn’t know. They want to know.”

After the shooting, the department said that Anthony, 16, had a gun that may have been removed from the crime scene. His family denies that the teenager had a weapon.

“Anthony was a beloved son, grandson, father and brother,” Yates said. “No gun was found at the scene, and that’s because Anthony did not have a gun at the time he was shot.”

In the lawsuit filed against the county Tuesday, attorneys said that the teenager’s hands were “visibly empty” at the time of the shooting and that the department did not provide proper medical aid to Anthony, who was “bleeding profusely.”

Sheriff’s officials declined to address specific claims in the lawsuit or release additional details.

In a statement, the department said: “It is frustratin­g for our department to see that there is a growing body of evidence in this case that is undeniable, and yet, to protect the integrity of the investigat­ion, to continue to maintain open channels of communicat­ion for more potential witnesses to come forward, we must stay silent.”

The incident began about 8 p.m. Feb. 4, when two deputies responded to a report of a young man in blue jeans and a black shirt pointing a handgun at a driver in the 1200 block of West 107th Street, according to the department. The driver, according to partial audio of the dispatch call, said he feared for his life.

While on foot, deputies encountere­d a 16-year-old boy who matched the descriptio­n. They spotted a handgun tucked in his pants, according to statements by the Sheriff’s Department.

When they ordered him not to move, the teen ignored the deputies’ commands and took off running into an apartment complex known as a gang hangout, sheriff’s Capt. Christophe­r Bergner has said.

After entering a courtyard, the young man turned toward the deputies, and one of them fired about 10 shots. The teenager was struck “several times” in the upper body, the department said in a statement.

After the shooting, the department said, neighbors immediatel­y flooded the courtyard and the two deputies called for help to control the crowd as it swelled to 30 or 40 people. Deputies believe the gun went missing during the commotion, Bergner has said.

A meeting meant to quell tensions in the community days later had to be cut short after a comment made by a sheriff’s official prompted outrage. Community activists called on California’s attorney general to independen­tly investigat­e the shooting, and residents marched in the neighborho­od to demand justice.

The teenager’s mother, Demetra Johnson, said that her son, who went by “A.J.,” was a loving person who managed to form a bond with each member of his large family. Johnson said that his daughter, Violet, was the “greatest love of his life.”

“It brought me so much joy to watch how affectiona­te and protective he was as a young father,” she said. “He demonstrat­ed the maturity and lovingness that most grown men didn’t show as a dad.”

Johnson said her son had “dreams for the future” and wanted to see his daughter grow up. “I just never got to say goodbye,” she said.

Anthony’s father, John Weber, stood by holding his son’s gray baseball mitt. He said that his son helped him build the seven-bedroom home he shared with his family. “Every time I walk down the halls, I think about the boards he helped me nail together,” he said.

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? V I O L E T, the daughter of Anthony Weber, who was slain by deputies, and his father, John Weber, reach out toward a photo of Anthony at a news conference Wednesday announcing a lawsuit against L.A. County.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times V I O L E T, the daughter of Anthony Weber, who was slain by deputies, and his father, John Weber, reach out toward a photo of Anthony at a news conference Wednesday announcing a lawsuit against L.A. County.

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