The Arizona Republic

How Chicago’s narrative changed on police slaying of 13-year-old

- Grace Hauck

CHICAGO – In the wake of the release of body-camera videos of the fatal police shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo — which appear to show Adam’s hands in the air when he was shot — many Chicagoans are calling attention to the city’s changing narrative about what happened that early morning late last month.

Hours after the incident, Chicago police labeled the incident an “armed confrontat­ion.” On Thursday, Chicago Ald. Carlos Ramirez-Rosa retweeted a statement on Twitter condemning the “police language calling Adam’s murder an ‘armed confrontat­ion.’ ”

Following the release of the videos, City Council’s Latino Caucus said in a statement “the body camera footage shows that Adam Toledo was an unarmed child with his hands up when he was shot by a Chicago police officer.”

Here’s what city officials said, and when:

March 29

A little after 5 a.m. local time that morning, less than three hours after the shooting, police spokesman Tom Ahern called the incident an “armed confrontat­ion” in a tweet. He also shared a photo of the gun recovered from the scene.

“Officers observed two subjects in a nearby alley, one subject fled on foot which resulted in an armed confrontat­ion. One subject shot and killed. 2nd subject in custody. Gun recovered on scene,” he wrote.

Nearly 12 hours later, a little after 4 p.m., the department released an official news release removing the word “armed” from “armed confrontat­ion,” and referring to the two people involved as “two males.”

“One armed offender fled from the officers. A foot pursuit ensured which resulted in a confrontat­ion,” the statement said.

April 5

On April 5, Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Police Superinten­dent David Brown held a news conference at New Life Church on the city’s West Side.

“A foot pursuit ensured, which resulted in a confrontat­ion in the alley,” Brown said. Asked by a reporter if Adam fired at officers, Brown said he would “not go into further detail.” Brown said he was awakened that early morning, with officers “alerting me that the subject seemed very young.”

Lightfoot, who said she had not viewed the body-cam videos, called the incident “a complicate­d story” and said Adam “was in possession of a gun.” Lightfoot said the city had to provide more “love” and “opportunit­ies” to its children to “lessen the allure of a gang life.”

“We will find the person who put the gun in Adam’s hand,” Lightfoot said. “An adult put a gun in a child’s hand — a young, impression­able child, and one who should not have been provided with lethal force — a weapon that could and did irreparabl­y change the course of his life.”

Hours after the news conference, the family of Adam Toledo said they still hadn’t see the police body-cam video of the incident and were “concerned by presumptio­ns, implicatio­ns, and statements made today that are not supported by the facts made public so far.”

“We are unable to refute or respond to these statements until we obtain the evidentiar­y facts, which so far are known only to the police,” the statement said. “We do, however, want to correct the hurtful and false mischaract­erization of Adam as a lonely child of the street who had no one to turn to. This is simply not true.”

April 10

Saturday, prosecutor­s described what the officer’s body camera footage showed, alleging Adam was holding a gun when the officer shot him.

The details were revealed during a bond hearing for Ruben Roman, 21, who was with Adam when he died.

Prosecutor­s said shots fired by Roman while standing next to Adam set off a chain of events that led to the fatal shooting.

April 15

On Thursday, Lightfoot changed her phrasing at a news conference calling for calm, saying Adam was “a child who was in contact with an adult who had a gun.” Asked whether Adam shot at an officer, she said: “I’ve seen no evidence whatsoever that Adam Toledo shot at the police.”

Meanwhile, Sarah Sinovic, chief spokeswoma­n for the Cook County state’s attorney, said the attorney who made the comment that Adam was holding a gun when the officer shot him “failed to fully inform himself before speaking in court.”

Later that day, a police watchdog agency released 17 bodycam videos, four third-party videos, a transmissi­on from the Office of Emergency Management and Communicat­ions, two audio recordings of 911 calls, six ShotSpotte­r recordings, as well as response and arrest reports.

The videos show Adam was running away from the officer down an alley when he slowed down by a fence, threw what looked like a gun behind the fence, and turned toward the officer with his hands up. The officer fired his weapon less than a second after Adam turned around to face him with his hands raised.

The city declined to comment to USA TODAY as the story relates to an active investigat­ion.

“An adult put a gun in a child’s hand — a young, impression­able child, and one who should not have been provided with lethal force — a weapon that could and did irreparabl­y change the course of his life.”

Lori Lightfoot

Mayor of Chicago

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/CHICAGO SUN-TIMES VIA AP ?? Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot asks the public to remain peaceful as the police shooting of Adam Toledo is reviewed.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/CHICAGO SUN-TIMES VIA AP Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot asks the public to remain peaceful as the police shooting of Adam Toledo is reviewed.
 ?? PAT NABONG/AP FILE ?? Chicago Police Superinten­dent David Brown says he was told “the subject seemed very young.”
PAT NABONG/AP FILE Chicago Police Superinten­dent David Brown says he was told “the subject seemed very young.”

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