San Diego Union-Tribune

ATTORNEYS SAY MAN SHOT 15 TIMES BY POLICE

- BY ALENE TCHEKMEDYI­AN Tchekmedyi­an writes for the Los Angeles Times.

Attorneys representi­ng the family of Dijon Kizzee said the 29-year-old man sustained 15 gunshot wounds and disputed the L.A. Sheriff ’s Department’s assertion that he pointed a gun at deputies before he was shot in South Los Angeles last month.

At a news conference Tuesday, attorney Carl Douglas said deputies fired some of the shots when Kizzee was already on the ground, and that the gunfire didn’t immediatel­y kill him. He said those findings came from an independen­t autopsy commission­ed by the family and displayed a body diagram showing the entry point of each wound.

“What this shows is he was alive and breathing and writhing in pain when the officers continued to stay away,” Douglas said, suggesting that deputies did not render aid during those critical moments as Kizzee bled to death on Aug. 31. Kizzee’s family members stood by at the news conference, wearing black face masks that said, “Justice for Dijon Kizzee.”

The shooting occurred in the Westmont neighborho­od after the deputies alleged that Kizzee was riding his bicycle in violation of vehicle codes. The Los Angeles Times has identified the two deputies as a trainee and his supervisor.

Douglas said witnesses reported that Kizzee did not have anything in his hands when he was shot.

The news conference followed a briefing last week at which Sheriff Alex Villanueva and other sheriff ’s officials offered new details of what led up to the shooting, which has generated national attention and triggered days of protests.

They said Kizzee was riding his bike on the wrong side of the street when he was stopped by two deputies from the South L.A. station. Capt. Kent Wegener said Kizzee made a U-turn in front of deputies, dropped his bike on the sidewalk and ran.

As one deputy caught up to Kizzee, Wegener said, Kizzee lifted his arms, clothes in each hand, struck a deputy in the face, and a pistol dropped to the ground.

“He bends over, reaches, picks up the gun and is shot as he stands with the gun in hand,” Wegener said. “You will see that the deputy struggling with Kizzee does not arm himself until Kizzee bends down to pick up the gun he dropped.”

That narrative conf licts in some ways with prior versions of events. Sheriff ’s officials had previously said that the shooting occurred after the gun fell to the ground. A day later, the Sheriff’s Department said it happened when Kizzee “made a motion” toward the gun.

 ?? STEFANIE DAZIO AP ?? Attorneys Carl Douglas (left) and Benjamin Crump detail the bullet wounds of Dijon Kizzee.
STEFANIE DAZIO AP Attorneys Carl Douglas (left) and Benjamin Crump detail the bullet wounds of Dijon Kizzee.

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