Orlando Sentinel

Shooting video is released

Six bodycam videos showed fatal encounter at Florida Mall.

- By Grace Toohey

Six body camera videos released Tuesday night do not clearly show an Orange County Sheriff’s deputy shooting an armed man in the back outside the Florida Mall, leaving key questions unanswered.

Deputy James Montiel shot Salaythis Melvin on Aug. 7 as the 22-year-old ran from him, after deputies had converged on him and a group of friends. A report from deputies said Montiel shot him after Melvin “turned his head” to face the deputy “while still holding his firearm,” which made the deputy think he was about to pull a gun.

The only body camera footage that shows the seconds before Melvin was shot came from a deputy driving toward Melvin, still about 50 yards away from him, captured through his front window.

In that video clip, Melvin is seen running through the relatively empty mall parking lot, with no one immediatel­y behind him for about 25 feet, when he falls to the ground mid-stride. A deputy, not in full uniform, runs up behind Melvin on the ground about four seconds later. Soon after, deputies surround him with their guns drawn, yelling at him to keep his hands up.

“Keep your [expletive] hands out,” one deputy shouts at Melvin. He twitches on the ground, moving his hands and legs as deputies shout at him: “Stop moving!”

“Get your hands out or you’re going to get [expletive] shot!

After about a minute passes, someone is heard saying the man is seizing and his eyes are rolling into his head, at which point the deputies approach him to give medical aid. Deputies try to stop the blood, and later start doing chest compressio­ns. Melvin starts breathing again as paramedics arrive — “coming in and out,” a deputy notes — but he appears barely responsive. Deputies say they cannot feel Melvin’s pulse.

“He’s barely hanging on,” one says.

Though Sheriff John Mina said he had reviewed body camera video of the shooting hours after it occurred, none of it came from the deputy who fired the fatal shot, according to the records released Tuesday. Brad Laurent, the attorney representi­ng Melvin’s family, said the agency told him that Montiel did not have body camera footage from the shooting.

He declined to comment further on the body camera footage late Tuesday.

The Sheriff’s Office did not immediatel­y respond to questions from the Sentinel about why there was no body camera footage from Montiel of the shooting.

Pressure from the public and Melvin’s family had built to release the footage, especially after it was confirmed that Melvin had been shot in the back.

The other five videos show deputies apprehendi­ng the other three other people detained, including deputies attempting to arrest one of the other men on a felony warrant.

The agency released the videos late Tuesday, just minutes before polls closed in the primary in which Mina won reelection.

Orange County sheriff’s officials announced last week the agency would release the video

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States