Los Angeles Times

Protest follows killing by deputies

Several arrests made in San Clemente a day after shooting death of a Black man.

- By Richard Winton

The fatal shooting of a Black man by two Orange County sheriff ’ s deputies during an altercatio­n in San Clemente, captured on video, spurred a protest and the arrest of several activists who blockaded a street Thursday.

At least f ive protesters were taken into custody when about 50 people demonstrat­ed at the site of the killing. They chanted, “No justice, no peace,” and said the deputies didn’t need to use deadly force on the man.

San Clemente officials implemente­d a 9 p. m. curfew Thursday seeking to quell any late- night protests like those that have led to confrontat­ions in cities across the nation.

In a cellphone video of Wednesday’s shooting, two sheriff ’ s deputies can be seen confrontin­g the man, later identified as Kurt Andras Reinhold, in the middle of El Camino Real. The deputies then wrestle him to the ground. After a voice, presumably that of a deputy, yells, “He’s got my gun,” two shots can be heard in the video, which was f irst posted by Local Story.

The video begins with the deputies, part of a specialize­d detail that handles homeless issues, seeking to corral Reinhold, 42.

The deputies tell Reinhold that he is walking in the middle of the street. Reinhold then repeatedly tells the deputies, “Stop touching

me, stop touching me.” Reinhold asks the deputies why they are trying to touch him. “Go sit down,” one of the deputies says. Reinhold refuses to comply and tries to walk past the deputies.

The deputies then push and grab Reinhold and wrestle him to the ground on a grassy area on the sidewalk about 1: 15 p. m. near the Hotel Miramar.

Reinhold wiggles on the ground as the deputies try to apply their weight to him and restrain his arms.

The voice then yells, “He’s got my gun, he’s got my gun.”

The video, shot by a bystander on the opposite curb, does not show enough detail to determine whether Reinhold actually reached for the deputy’s gun.

But within a second, two shots can be heard, and the bystander recording the video says, “Oh my God.”

A second video shows the deputies performing CPR on the man.

Sheriff Don Barnes said Thursday that Reinhold tried to unholster a deputy’s weapon. “It is not clear if Mr. Reinhold was able to get the weapon out of the holster,” he said.

The sheriff displayed a grainy photo that he said showed Reinhold grabbing the gun. Barnes said the image came from surveillan­ce video from a security camera at a nearby business. The Times has not reviewed the video.

“Obviously it ended in a way we did not hope,”

Barnes said. “Weapon retention is one of the f irst things taught in the academy.”

The shooting has echoes of the killing of Charly “Africa” Keunang by Los Angeles police officers during a violent confrontat­ion on the sidewalk of skid row in 2015. Keunang was shot after a rookie officer yelled that the homeless mentally ill man was going for his gun as they wrestled.

The Los Angeles County district attorney declined to charge the officers, saying Keunang had his f ingers around the gun and presented a reasonable threat. Keunang’s death led to questions about the number of police shootings involving unhoused people struggling with mental illness.

Carrie Braun, a spokeswoma­n for the Orange County Sheriff ’s Depart

ment, said she could not say what led to the detention of Reinhold, because deputies did not convey that informatio­n as part of their required statement on the shooting. She said that informatio­n will be gathered by the Orange County district attorney’s investigat­ors who handle shootings by sheriff ’ s deputies.

Reinhold had lived in San Clemente for 30 days, the sheriff said, and had been approached about receiving shelter but declined. Barnes said the deputies are part of a unit that specialize­s in homeless services and were familiar with Reinhold. They have been trained in de- escalation techniques, he said.

Activists carrying banners and signs reading “Stop Killing Black People” stood in the street Thursday demanding justice for Reinhold.

Jackson Hinkle, a former San Clemente City Council candidate and one of the protest organizers, called on the sheriff to dismiss the deputies and for Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer to charge them with second- degree murder for what Hinkle said amounted to killing a man for jaywalking.

Deputies wearing helmets and tactical vests and carrying batons formed a skirmish line and removed protesters from the roadway, arresting several of them on suspicion of obstructio­n.

Some residents said they were stunned by the shooting, with one saying they had seen Reinhold minutes before he was killed. “He went to the f lower store and asked for money because he was hungry,” Melinda Steinmetz told the Orange County Register. “Then he went to get something to eat, and the next thing we knew, he was dead in the street.”

Police use- of- force experts said the situation Wednesday was difficult and escalated despite the initial calm efforts of the deputies to remove Reinhold from a busy thoroughfa­re.

“The gentleman presents a danger to himself and motorists,” said Ed Obayashi, a deputy in Plumas County, Calif., and state training expert on the use of force. “The deputies are trying to get him out of the street. He is being belligeren­t and denying what he is doing, and they are calm and just repeating instructio­ns.”

 ?? Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ?? ORANGE COUNTY Sheriff Don Barnes, shown in 2019, said the slain man tried to take a deputy’s gun.
Allen J. Schaben Los Angeles Times ORANGE COUNTY Sheriff Don Barnes, shown in 2019, said the slain man tried to take a deputy’s gun.

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