The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Family seeks answers after police kill Dekalb man

- By Shaddi Abusaid shaddi.abusaid@ajc.com

The family of a Dekalb County man shot and killed by police at his home Monday afternoon is demanding answers and questionin­g the officers’ descriptio­ns of events.

Matthew Zadok Williams, 35, was shot inside his Decatur-area condominiu­m after police said he lunged at officers with a knife on two separate occasions.

But Williams’ mother and sisters said he despised violence, had never even been in a fistfight and was reluctant to kill insects or other pests that found their way inside his home.

“He was a nonviolent person. He wouldn’t kill a bug,” his sister, Hahnah Williams, said as she and her siblings consoled their grieving mother Wednesday afternoon.

They don’t believe Williams would have attacked officers and are calling on the Dekalb County Police Department to release the body camera footage of the deadly shooting. The department did not make the video available Wednesday when asked by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on.

According to the GBI, officers responded to the Terraces Apartments near I-20 about 4 p.m. after receiving a call about a man with a large knife. Authoritie­s have not said who made the initial 911 call or released the audio, citing the ongoing investigat­ion.

Though police say Williams lunged at officers twice, one neighbor told the AJC he saw the man run from police and dive through a glass window into his bedroom before the first shot rang out.

“Based on what we’re hearing, whatever happened is very, very different from what police are reporting,” said attorney Mawuli Davis, who

is representi­ng Williams’ family. He said he’s concerned investigat­ors are crafting a false narrative to detract from the latest fatal shooting of a Black man.

“We are in a time in our history as a country and a state where we can no longer hide behind open investigat­ions,” Davis said. “If there is body camera footage, it has to be released immediatel­y so that this family can see, so that the world can know what the truth is.”

Williams’ family described him as a “day trader” and “homebody” who spent most of his free time with loved ones. He didn’t party much and never went to clubs. His only previous run-ins with the law involved traffic violations, Hahnah Williams said.

She said at this point, the family has more questions than answers, but she believes her brother was outside his condo working on a plumbing issue when the first officers arrived. Witnesses told her they saw him outside carrying a blue bucket but never saw a weapon.

“They caught him by surprise while he was working on his own home, and that’s why he ran,” Hahnah Williams said. “He was so scared, he kicked his own window in just to get away.”

Jason Neal, a brick mason who has lived in the complex for more than 15 years, had just gotten off work when he noticed several patrol cars blocking the street at the front of his neighborho­od.

He said he didn’t see the initial interactio­n with police but saw Williams run toward his home and scurry onto the roof before kicking in a glass window and diving through it headfirst. He said he never saw a weapon in the man’s hand as he ran back to the house.

“He kicked the window a couple times and just went in,” Neal said. “He must have been scared.”

Several minutes later, he heard a single shot and a scream. A few minutes after that, he heard police fire three or four more shots from outside the home, he said.

Authoritie­s said Williams had two separate encounters with Dekalb officers that resulted in shots being fired, but investigat­ors are not sure when he was hit and injured.

“Once contact was made, he lunged at officers with the knife, causing one of them to discharge their firearm,” Dekalb police spokeswoma­n Michaela Vincent said.

The second encounter happened when additional officers arrived and spotted Williams at the entrance of his condo, according to the GBI. Authoritie­s said Williams was still holding the knife as officers tried to arrest him.

Police tried using a Taser on Williams, but it didn’t work, GBI spokeswoma­n Natalie Ammons said. After that, at least one officer fired at Williams again. His body was later discovered inside the home.

Neal called the shooting tragic and said he believes Williams might still be alive if police had called in a negotiator to speak with him.

In a brief statement, Dekalb police said the department is conducting an internal review into the police shooting while the GBI conducts an independen­t investigat­ion. Some department­s release body camera footage of police shootings shortly after they occur, while others wait for the GBI to submit its findings.

 ??  ?? Matthew Williams was shot Monday by police in his Decaturare­a condo.
Matthew Williams was shot Monday by police in his Decaturare­a condo.

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