San Francisco Chronicle

Refugee’s dreams turned to distress

Ethiopian killed by officer saw life unravel in Oakland

- By Rachel Swan

A man shot and killed by an Oakland police officer in August left behind only a small pile of luggage and a few family photograph­s, one of which had a phone number scrawled on the back.

The number belonged to the 30-year-old man’s mother, Genet Alemu, who sells injera bread to support a family of seven in Ethiopia. She last heard from her son, Yonas Alehegne, several months before his death.

“I feel like I’m dead,” Alemu said from her village in Dire Dawa, where she lives in a house that her other son, Habtamu, describes as “almost a tent.” Alemu was reached by phone Sept. 12 — the day of the Ethiopian new year. Dawn had broken and a rooster crowed insistentl­y in the background.

Rememberin­g “Yonas,” Alemu wailed.

“He was my first son,” she said, speaking through an interprete­r in Amharic, the language spoken in Ethiopia. “He came to the U.S. to help us.”

Whatever dreams and ambitions Alehegne had when he arrived in the United States in 2012 were soon replaced by distress and desperatio­n.

African refugee

A refugee from political persecutio­n in his home country, Alehegne hoped to find better employment and a means to send remittance­s back home. But, once here, he exhibited signs of mental illness, and apparently never got treatment. Interviews with family in Ethiopia, people who knew him in the United States and a review of his criminal record and probation report reveal a man who behaved in bizarre and violent ways, became homeless, got into criminal trouble and grew alienated from the systems that might have helped. Toward the end, he desperatel­y wanted to return to Africa.

On Aug. 27, Alehegne was shot dead by Officer Jennifer Farrell on the 200 block of MacArthur Boulevard, after police say he bludgeoned her with a metal chain. He had been sleeping in the laundry room of an apartment complex, and Farrell had been called to investigat­e reports that Alehegne had assaulted a resident in the building’s garage. Farrell confronted Alehegne when he stepped into the street in front of her police car. When she got out of her car, police say, he struck her with the chain.

Farrell fired several shots, killing Alehegne.

“I knew it was him before they told me,” said Rebecca Lakew, a former office manager at the Ethiopian Community Cultural Center, an Oakland organizati­on that Alehegne would often visit, asking for money and food and begging for help so that he could return home to Ethiopia.

Lakew said the center offered to buy Alehegne a plane ticket home, shortly before his death. But he never filled out the necessary paper“When work.

“We tried our best,” she said. “Maybe we should have tried harder.”

While some worry that the Ethiopian community failed Alehegne, others say the U.S. government should have done more to help him.

“He would have been saved if he had received proper treatment and medication­s,” said Tadios Belay, executive director of the Horn of Africa Human Rights Network. Belay helped set up a GoFundMe page to raise money to send Alehegne’s body back to Ethiopia and pay for funeral expenses. He is seeking the power of attorney to file a wrongful death suit against Oakland police, on behalf of Alehegne’s family.

Seeking a way out

Born to a father who served as a soldier for the Derg, a communist regime that ruled Ethiopia until 1987, Alehegne dropped out of school after seventh grade to become a day laborer, according to his brother Habtamu, who spoke to The Chronicle by phone from Ethiopia through an interprete­r. Unable to find consistent work, and denied opportunit­ies because his tribe, the Amhara, was an ethnic minority in the region, Alehegne fled Ethiopia for neighborin­g Djibouti when he was 18 or 19.

Alehegne left his home city of Dire Dawa on foot and walked across the border to a refugee camp, Habtamu said, traveling a distance of some 150 miles. He told family members he was assaulted along the way, claiming that strangers bit him.

he was at home, he was fine,” Habtamu said, adding that the journey left Alehegne traumatize­d. When he called home, Habtamu said, “he would ask me to pray for him.”

The U.S. State Department admitted Alehegne into the United States in 2012 under stepped up efforts by the Obama administra­tion to increase the number of refugees from Africa, in response to sectarian violence, persecutio­n, famine and human traffickin­g. Alehegne was one of 820 Ethiopian refugees who arrived in the U.S. in 2012, up from 594 in 2011. He would have undergone an intense screening process to be accepted into the refugee program.

“There’s a screening process, fact-checking, and corroborat­ing people’s identities,” said Chris Boian, spokesman for the Office of the U.N. High Commission­er for Refugees in Washington. All who enter a refugee camp have to undergo an exhaustive series of interviews — including psychologi­cal screenings — to determine whether they will successful­ly assimilate into a new host country.

Vetting process

“It’s a constant process of prioritizi­ng and looking for the very most vulnerable individual­s,” Boian said.

Only after completing that screening process could Alehegne have applied to resettle in the United States, at which point he would have had to pass security checks, an in-person Department of Homeland Security interview and a medical exam.

Esayas Gezahegne, an Ethiopian refugee who works for the nonprofit Horn of Africa Human Rights Network in Oakland and is familiar with the screening process, said Alehegne could not have passed had he shown signs of a mental illness.

“I’m quite sure no,” he said.

Life in America

According to probation reports, Alehegne touched down in New York in 2012 but left almost immediatel­y for Kentucky, where he lived with a friend while working short-term jobs as a parking attendant and custodian. He obtained a residency card during that time and worked at a Walmart in 2013, according to his former attorney Randy Baker.

Yet, better employment evidently didn’t beget a better life. After Alehegne resettled in the United States, he routinely sent money home, Alemu said, but his mental health began to deteriorat­e. Baker said Alehegne saw several doctors who said he suffered from mental illness. But Alehegne told probation officers that he couldn’t recall the diagnosis, and never took medication­s to treat it, Baker said.

He moved to the Bay Area in 2014, unemployed and on his own. And he quickly ran into trouble that summer when four men beat him up on a street and broke his nose. He was staying in a respite wing of the East Oakland Community Project homeless shelter that August, healing from the attack, when, according to authoritie­s, he followed a shelter employee into a bathroom she was cleaning and began undoing his pants, yelling at her to “shut up.” She screamed and others came to her aid, but later that night, Alehegne followed her into and through a BART train, laughing at her distress, authoritie­s said.

Alehegne was arrested and convicted of threatenin­g and stalking the woman, then sentenced to 16 months in state prison.

Alehegne’s English was so limited that on the day of the offense, an interprete­r had to tell him he’d been kicked out of the homeless shelter. Another shelter resident, Vernon Wiley, would testify in court later that Alehegne tended to mimic “jibber jabber” he heard on the radio, but couldn’t communicat­e beyond that.

“He may not have had the wherewitha­l to access what services we have,” Charles Jameson, the Oakland attorney who represente­d Alehegne, said.

On the streets

Alehegne served time at San Quentin State Prison and was released in May, having served only part of his sentence. By then he had become increasing­ly addled, said Fikre Atnafe, another Ethiopian immigrant living in Oakland who saw Alehegne hanging around Lake Merritt shortly after his release, and tried to help.

“He was on the streets, Atnafe said, adding: “He was extremely traumatize­d by the police.”

In July, an Oakland police officer found Alehegne plucking the feathers from a decapitate­d goose by Lake Merritt. Alehegne told the officer he was hungry and intended to eat the goose. The officer stunned him with a Taser after Alehegne refused to obey commands.

He was sent to John George Psychiatri­c Hospital in San Leandro for an evaluation, then transferre­d to Santa Rita Jail, charged with cruelty to an animal and resisting arrest.

“You gotta know, this guy came from a different part of the world,” Atnafe said, suggesting that Alehegne’s mental illness, compounded by a language barrier, invited misunderst­anding.

Calls to his parole agent were forwarded to the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion. An agency spokesman declined to comment.

A small vigil

On a recent Saturday, Atnafe joined about two dozen other people for a vigil in memory of Alehegne. It was held at Van Buren Avenue and MacArthur Boulevard in Oakland, near the laundry room where Alehegne slept.

Atnafe hung an Ethiopian flag on a telephone wire and lit candles beneath it as others passed out slices of spicy anebabero bread to commemorat­e the New Year.

The vigil’s organizer, Ash Ashebe, passed out flyers with Alehegne’s photograph. It showed the man with a long, narrow face and searing brown eyes who came to the United States for refuge and wound up dying in the street.

For now, his remains are being held by the Alameda County coroner’s office. But Benyam Mulugeta, board president of the Oakland’s Ethiopian Orthodox Church, believes it isn’t too late to grant Alehegne’s last wish: to go home.

 ?? Photos by Sarah Rice / Special to The Chronicle ?? Pineal Anulo (left), Meheret Anulo, Nadege Nadege and Annick Seri attend a Sept. 13 vigil for Yonas Alehegne, who was shot dead by an Oakland police officer after he bludgeoned her with a chain.
Photos by Sarah Rice / Special to The Chronicle Pineal Anulo (left), Meheret Anulo, Nadege Nadege and Annick Seri attend a Sept. 13 vigil for Yonas Alehegne, who was shot dead by an Oakland police officer after he bludgeoned her with a chain.
 ??  ?? Fikre Atnafe scans Alehegne’s family photos, among the few possession­s he left behind.
Fikre Atnafe scans Alehegne’s family photos, among the few possession­s he left behind.
 ?? Sarah Rice / Special to The Chronicle ??
Sarah Rice / Special to The Chronicle
 ??  ?? Elizabeth Tena lights candles on Sept. 13 at a vigil for Yonas Alehegne, an Ethiopian immigrant who was killed by an Oakland officer after struggling with mental illness and apparently never receiving treatment.
Yonas Alehegne fled political...
Elizabeth Tena lights candles on Sept. 13 at a vigil for Yonas Alehegne, an Ethiopian immigrant who was killed by an Oakland officer after struggling with mental illness and apparently never receiving treatment. Yonas Alehegne fled political...

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