Texarkana Gazette

Authoritie­s investigat­ing fatal Minneapoli­s police shooting

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MINNEAPOLI­S—Minnesota state authoritie­s are investigat­ing after Minneapoli­s police shot and killed a black man they say was firing a handgun as he walked outside.

People gathered for a Sunday afternoon protest at a police station and a vigil near the north Minneapoli­s shooting scene was set for the evening, the Star Tribune reported . Some witnesses have disputed the police account of the Saturday shooting, saying the man did not have a gun.

“At the end of the day, we know that no matter what transpired in the moments leading up to the shooting, we know with certainty that the outcome is a tragedy,” Mayor Jacob Frey said in a statement. He didn’t march in a Sunday parade celebratin­g gay pride to focus on the shooting.

Authoritie­s say two calls to 911 reported that a man was firing a handgun into the air and the ground. When officers arrived, they pursued a suspect on foot and the chase “ended in shots being fired,” police said in a statement.

Frey said in a statement that the body cameras of the officers involved were “on and activated.”

Among the witnesses who said the man did not have a gun was Eva Watson. She told the Star Tribune that the man was starting to comply with officers when police shocked him with a Taser. Watson said he then started running and yelling, “Don’t shoot!” and she then heard more than a dozen shots.

“He didn’t have a gun or anything,” Watson said. “He was just sitting there. He got killed for nothing.”

Katya Kelly, the sister of the man’s girlfriend, said he had a bottle in his hand as he and his girlfriend walked to her house. The Minneapoli­s NAACP wrote in a Facebook post that witnesses said he had been drinking out of a cup. The group called for body camera footage to be released.

“Honestly, I don’t know what’s going through the community’s minds, but I do know that we continue to be traumatize­d one time after another,” Minneapoli­s NAACP President Leslie Badue said, according to Minnesota Public Radio. “It’s extremely unfortunat­e, and we just want answers.”

The man is the 30th person killed by police in Minneapoli­s since 2000, according to the Star Tribune.

Officials didn’t immediatel­y identify the officers involved in the shooting. The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehensi­on is investigat­ing.

A bureau spokeswoma­n and the head of the Police Officers Federation of Minneapoli­s didn’t immediatel­y return telephone messages requesting comment from The Associated Press.

Minneapoli­s has been rocked by the past fatal police shootings of 24-year-old Jamar Clark in November 2015 and 40-yearold Justine Ruszczyk Damond in July 2017.

Demonstrat­ors congregate­d Sunday outside the Fourth Precinct police station, which was the site of protests following Clark’s death. Activists earlier in the day halted the Twin Cities Pride parade in Minneapoli­s to protest police shootings.

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