The Denver Post

POLICE SHOOTING SCRUTINY

- By Victoria Kim, Paige St. John and Nicole Santa Cruz

Civil rights groups demand an investigat­ion of the officers involved in the shooting of an unarmed African-American man in his backyard in Sacramento, Calif.

CALIF.» National SACRAMENTO, scrutiny is growing around Sacramento police amid more protests over the shooting of Stephon Clark, an unarmed African-American man.

On Monday, civil rights groups demanded that federal and state prosecutor­s investigat­e the officers involved in the shooting. An attorney for Clark’s family said he is seeking an independen­t autopsy.

“They didn’t have to kill him like that,” said Clark’s grandmothe­r, Sequita Thompson, at a news conference Monday at City Hall.

Before their game Sunday at Golden 1 Center, Sacramento Kings and Boston Celtics players wore T-shirts bearing Clark’s name. The black shirts had the words “Accountabi­lity. We Are One” emblazoned on the front and “Stephon Clark” on the back.

The NBA players wore the shirts during pregame warmups and continued wearing them during the playing of the national anthem. Some players from both teams also made a video posted on social media, saying “these tragedies have to stop” and “there must be accountabi­lity.”

Sacramento police and authoritie­s have urged the public to give them time to complete their investigat­ion into the 22-year-old’s March 18 shooting in his backyard, including a moment captured on police video when an officer says to mute the sound of the recording.

In an interview with the Los Angeles Times on Friday, Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg said Clark’s death, although still under investigat­ion, “was wrong,” and he pointed to the need for not only more administra­tive change, but also a reckoning with racism itself.

“Our kids and men don’t feel safe,” Steinberg said. “There is no danger if we do the right thing, if we push aggressive­ly to change what must be changed.”

Others, including House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., have been more blunt; Pelosi said Clark “should be alive today.”

The Rev. Al Sharpton on Sunday said he was alarmed by the shooting. Police believed Clark was armed with a gun at the time, but only a cellphone was recovered at the scene.

Sharpton said he planned to attend Clark’s funeral Thursday.

Clark’s death sparked tension in the state capital Friday night as protesters clashed with police in riot gear, capping a week of unrest during which protesters briefly shut down Interstate 5 and blocked access to a Sacramento Kings game.

“Certainly this case has not gotten the national attention that I think it deserves,” Sharpton said in a segment on his MSNBC show “PoliticsNa­tion,” criticizin­g U.S. Attorney General Jeff Sessions for not addressing police reform when he spoke to a black law enforcemen­t group in Alabama last week. “Twenty shots at an un- armed man. I immediatel­y was alarmed by this.”

Appearing on Sharpton’s show, Benjamin Crump, an attorney for Clark’s family, called the shooting a “tragic, senseless killing.”

“He made no threat against the police, and the police offered no warning to him. They didn’t identify themselves,” Crump said.

The incident began when Sacramento police officers responded to the 7500 block of 29th Street around 9:15 p.m. after receiving a call that a 6-foot-1 man wearing a black hoodie and dark pants was breaking into vehicles, authoritie­s said. The caller said the man was hiding in a backyard, according to Sacramento police.

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 ?? Justin Sullivan, Getty Images ?? A Black Lives Matter supporter holds a picture of Stephon Clark in front of a California Highway Patrol officer Friday in Sacramento, Calif.
Justin Sullivan, Getty Images A Black Lives Matter supporter holds a picture of Stephon Clark in front of a California Highway Patrol officer Friday in Sacramento, Calif.

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