Los Angeles Times

Family of slain Black man files claim against O. C.

Wrongful- death case targets deputies who shot homeless father in San Clemente.

- By Anh Do

The family of a Black homeless man fatally shot last month in San Clemente has f iled a wrongful- death claim against the Orange County Sheriff ’s Department, accusing deputies of targeting people of color and turning a jaywalking incident “deadly.”

On the afternoon of Sept. 23, Kurt Andras Reinhold was crossing El Camino Real in front of Hotel Miramar while holding some peanuts and an iced tea.

Coming out, he began walking in the middle of the street, disrupting traffic, based on witness accounts and a video shot by a bystander.

Two deputies from the sheriff ’s Homeless Outreach Team approached Reinhold.

An argument erupted.

One of the officers, using his gloved hand, repeatedly tapped the victim’s right shoulder, as Reinhold told him, “Stop touching me.”

According to the video, one deputy ordered Reinhold to “go sit down,” but Reinhold, appearing agitated, instead tried to pass the two men.

As the officers wrestled Reinhold to the ground, a voice, presumably a deputy’s, cried out: “He’s got my gun! He’s got my gun!” Two shots are then heard.

It is not possible to tell from the video whether Reinhold actually tried to grab a weapon.

Orange County sheriff ’ s deputies do not wear body cameras. The department plans to roll them out over the next 18 months.

“These officers are supposedly trained to deal with the homeless. They needed to deescalate the situation, rather than escalate it,” said John Taylor, an attorney representi­ng Latoya Reinhold, the widow of Kurt Reinhold. She, along with the victim’s son, 7, and daughter, 8, have f iled a claim for wrongful death, statutory and punitive damages.

“How do we get from helping to ending up on the ground — the victim of gunfire — when he was unarmed?” Taylor said.

At a news conference in Santa Ana on Tuesday, Latoya Reinhold read a short statement while surrounded by grieving relatives, among them, Judy Reinhold, Kurt Reinhold’s tearful mother, along with his sister.

Latoya Reinhold described her trauma and painted a picture of her husband as a devoted soccer coach who woke up early Saturday mornings to participat­e in the game with his son.

“None of this makes any sense. It’s a nightmare I’m living with each and every day,” Latoya Reinhold said.

Taylor and Neil Gehlawat, another attorney representi­ng the family, said that Kurt Reinhold, who was 42, joins “an ever- growing mountain of evidence of unarmed Black men and women shot by white officers.”

“Jaywalking should not get you killed in Orange County. Being homeless should not get you killed in Orange County,” Taylor said.

Kurt Reinhold struggled with mental illness and had been diagnosed with schizoaffe­ctive disorder, Gehlawat said.

At times, he took medication, and he had drifted from living with his mother or wife, whom he married in 2008, based in Inglewood and the Ladera Heights area of Los Angeles.

The father of two made his way to the beachfront town of San Clemente in September, drawn to it, “like many others” because of its beauty, Taylor said.

The family is seeking “justice and transparen­cy” from sheriff ’ s officials and are awaiting the autopsy report, footage of the incident and radio traffic, along with the names of deputies to see if they have been involved in use- of- force situations in the past, Gehlawat said.

Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes, who has said the Homeless Outreach Team had engaged with Reinhold many times previously to direct him to resources, issued a statement responding to the family.

“The Orange County Sheriff ’s Department extends our condolence­s to the family of Mr. Reinhold for their loss,” the statement read.

“Every time law enforcemen­t contact escalates to the use of deadly force, it is tragic for the family, the deputies and the community. It is vitally important that we reserve judgment until a full and complete investigat­ion has been completed by the Orange County district attorney’s office.”

‘ None of this makes any sense. It’s a nightmare I’m living with each and every day.’ — Latoya Reinhold, widow of Kurt Reinhold, who was killed Sept. 23

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