Los Angeles Times

Family of woman fatally shot by LAPD f iles claim

Family of woman shot in hostage standoff says officers’ actions escalated situation.

- By Nicole Santa Cruz

Survivors of Elizabeth Tollison, a hostage in a June 16 standoff, say police failed to properly defuse the situation.

The family of a woman fatally shot by Los Angeles police during a standoff with a man who held a knife to her throat outside a Van Nuys homeless outreach center has filed a wrongful-death claim against the city, alleging that officers failed to take appropriat­e steps to defuse the incident before firing 18 rounds at the suspect.

“This is a fast-moving situation because they turned it into a fast-moving situation,” Brian Dunn, an attorney for the family of Elizabeth Tollison, said of police officers’ actions during a news conference Wednesday.

The wrongful-death claim came a day after police released a dramatic video recording of the June 16 incident and announced changes in tactics and weaponry intended to reduce the odds of endangerin­g the life of an innocent civilian. Several weeks after the Van Nuys shooting, a store manager was shot and killed by an LAPD officer exchanging gunfire with a suspect at a Trader Joe’s in Silver Lake. Previously, the LAPD had gone 13 years without killing a hostage or bystander.

Tollison, 49, was standing outside the homeless center at Central Lutheran Church in the 6400 block of Tyrone Avenue when police confronted Guillermo Perez, 32, who grabbed her and held a knife to her throat. Three officers opened fire with their handguns. Perez died at the scene, and Tollison was taken to a hospital, where she died two days later.

Officers were called to the church after reports that a man in a maroon top and camouflage shorts had stabbed a woman, whom police identified as Perez’s exgirlfrie­nd. The woman, who was not named, suffered cuts on her hand.

Dunn said officers should have recognized that Perez was “not in his right mind” before drawing weapons and screaming at him to drop the knife. They could have communicat­ed with him to temper the incident before he approached Tollison, he said.

“He didn’t lapse into this very provocativ­e act until — with guns drawn, voices raised, conflictin­g commands given — they closed the distance on him,” Dunn said.

In the video, officers yell repeatedly at Perez to put the knife down before firing bean bags at him. Perez holds up a metal chair as a shield, then moves back toward Tollison, who had been standing against a wall with her walker during the violent confrontat­ion. Perez wraps his arms around Tollison and presses the knife against her throat with both hands. The officers begin shooting, and both Perez and Tollison fall to the ground.

A blood-covered knife was found near Perez’s body.

“Tragically, this was another case where officers were forced to make splitsecon­d decisions based on the actions of a violent individual,” LAPD Chief Michel Moore said, calling the shooting “every officer’s worst nightmare.”

At a news conference Tuesday, Moore said he was ordering new tactical training for officers and would equip them with less-lethal weapons that have a longer range and more power than the bean bags.

A spokesman for the department declined to comment on the family’s claim.

One of Tollison’s sons, Jesse Pelaez, said that when he visited his mother in the hospital before she died, a doctor told him that the knife wound to her throat inflicted by Perez was “not lifethreat­ening.” Pelaez, dressed in black, had tears in his eyes as his attorney spoke to the media.

“It hurts me so much knowing I’ll never be able to see or talk to my mother again because the police didn’t know how to handle a situation properly,” Pelaez said.

“I hope the police get stricter on their training and protocol so this doesn’t happen to anyone else and anyone else’s family.”

nicole.santacruz @latimes.com Twitter: @nicolesant­acruz Times staff writer Cindy Chang contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? NICK RAMIREZ, with his brother Jesse Pelaez, right, holds a photo of their mother, Elizabeth Tollison.
Al Seib Los Angeles Times NICK RAMIREZ, with his brother Jesse Pelaez, right, holds a photo of their mother, Elizabeth Tollison.
 ??  ?? TOLLISON, 49, was fatally shot by LAPD officers after a man took her hostage at knifepoint on June 16.
TOLLISON, 49, was fatally shot by LAPD officers after a man took her hostage at knifepoint on June 16.

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