Los Angeles Times

Lawyer releases shooting video

Attorney releases video, saying it shows boy had tossed his gun

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an

Teen was unarmed when L.A. cops killed him, attorney says.

An attorney for the family of a 14-year-old boy killed by a Los Angeles police officer released body-camera footage Tuesday of the controvers­ial 2016 encounter, arguing that the recordings show that the boy had tossed his gun and was unarmed when he was shot.

Humberto Guizar released two clips recorded by the body cameras of two officers who responded to a vandalism report behind a North Chicago Street apartment complex, where the teen, Jesse Romero, was with a group of boys tagging graffiti.

Two and a half minutes into the footage, the officers spot at least two boys outside the complex. One starts running, and the two officers give chase down Cesar Chavez Avenue. At least one shouts multiple times for the boy to stop.

Less than a minute later, as the officers approach a street corner, a gunshot is heard. Officer Eden Medina, who is in front, pauses at a pay phone and appears to peek around the corner. “Shots fired,” one said. “Shots are fired, shots fired, officer needs help,” the other said.

Medina turns onto Breed Street with his gun drawn, and gunfire echoes.

“Get down!” a voice

shouts.

“Let me see your ... hands!”

As the officers approach, Jesse is lying on the sidewalk, wounded. A revolver is seen on the other side of a wrought-iron fence.

The recordings do not show Jesse getting shot. But his family’s attorney argued that if Jesse was holding a gun when Medina peered around the corner, the officer would not have walked into the line of fire.

Because the gun was found several feet away, Jesse tossed it before he was shot, Guizar said; there was “no way” he could have thrown a gun over a fence while wounded. He said Jesse was struck twice: in his stomach and chest.

“The video shows that when the officer fired at the kid, he fired at him when he wasn’t a threat,” Guizar

said. “He didn’t have a gun in his hand, and he killed him.”

In a statement released Tuesday, the Los Angeles Police Department said it was aware of the video release and pointed to its “thorough investigat­ion” of the shooting. The department said the inspector general and the Police Commission determined that the use of force was appropriat­e.

The department “understand­s that any time that an officer uses deadly force that ends in a fatality it is a painful tragedy,” the statement said. “This is why the LAPD, its oversight bodies and the Los Angeles district attorney’s office scrutinize these incidents as closely as possible to ensure that the use of deadly force was appropriat­e to defend the life of the officer or members of the public.”

The shooting set off protests in Jesse’s Boyle Heights neighborho­od and reignited the debate over how officers use deadly force. It was the second time in 12 days that Medina had fatally shot someone.

The boy’s parents filed a federal lawsuit against Medina and the city, alleging that police violated their son’s civil rights, used excessive force and denied him timely medical care.

Los Angeles County prosecutor­s declined to file criminal charges against the officer, saying in an 11-page memo that Medina reasonably

believed the teenager posed a deadly threat and used “reasonable force” to defend himself and others.

Central to the controvers­y surroundin­g the shooting was whether Jesse fired at police or whether the gun went off after the teenager tossed it away. After examining and testing the revolver, prosecutor­s wrote, an investigat­or said the “most likely explanatio­n of the evidence was that the revolver was fired, then dropped.”

According to a report from LAPD Chief Charlie Beck last year, one officer saw Jesse crouched on the sidewalk, his right arm extended toward them. Thinking Jesse was going to shoot, Medina fired his gun twice, hitting the teenager.

But a woman who said she saw the shooting told The Times that as Jesse ran, she saw him pull a gun from his basketball shorts and throw it toward a fence. The gun hit the fence and fell to the ground, she said, and she heard the weapon fire.

Three people who saw the shooting from a nearby car told investigat­ors they saw Jesse throw a gun up and toward the fence, the prosecutor­s’ memo said. The gun hit the top of the fence, fell on the sidewalk and “discharged upon impact with the ground,” according to the memo.

alene.tchekmedyi­an@latimes.com

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? TERESA DOMINGUEZ, center, whose son was killed by L.A. police in 2016, embraces friends after watching body-camera footage of the fatal encounter. She filed a federal suit against the city and an LAPD officer.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times TERESA DOMINGUEZ, center, whose son was killed by L.A. police in 2016, embraces friends after watching body-camera footage of the fatal encounter. She filed a federal suit against the city and an LAPD officer.
 ??  ?? JESSE ROMERO, 14, was with a group of boys tagging graffiti when officers gave chase.
JESSE ROMERO, 14, was with a group of boys tagging graffiti when officers gave chase.

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