The Denver Post

Chief details tragic death

Metz: Homeowner shot by officer didn’t drop gun as ordered

- By Noelle Phillips

Aurora police officers ordered the man they fatally shot while protecting his home early Monday to drop his gun multiple times, but they did not identify themselves as police before an officer fired four shots, Chief Nick Metz said.

Multiple officers had heard gunshots from inside the home at 10609 E. Montview Blvd. and were standing near the front door’s threshold, looking into the well-lit home when they saw homeowner Gary Black come around a corner holding a gun and a flashlight, Metz said.

“For the next 13 seconds, officers continued to give at least five commands to Mr. Black to drop the gun and to show his hands,” Metz said Thursday at a news conference. “We don’t know why, but for whatever reason Mr. Black did not drop the gun.”

Black had significan­t hearing impairment because of his military service, Metz said. Also, the scene was noisy from people screaming, including Black’s 11year-old grandson, who had been

violently attacked by a naked intruder.

For the first time since the shooting early Monday, Metz addressed the media about what happened in the early morning hours when a naked stranger burst through the front door of the Black family home and began attacking the grandson sleeping on the couch.

Black, a decorated Vietnam veteran and retired federal government employee, grabbed his 9mm pistol and killed the intruder, 26-year-old Dejon Harper.

Metz defended the actions of his officers, including the one who fired the fatal shots, and said tears had been shed at the Aurora Police Department over the tragedy. He said threats had been made against Aurora police officers in connection with the shooting.

“There was a reference that our officers acted recklessly,” Metz said. “I dispute that strongly. They were not reckless. They responded how I would expect them to respond given the limited amount of informatio­n they were given.”

Metz also hailed Black as a hero for defending his family.

“There’s no doubt in my mind in any shape or form that Mr. Black saved his family’s life that night,” Metz said.

Metz played audio between officers and a dispatcher and said he would release some 911 calls. But he will not release the body camera footage from officers at the request of the 17th Judicial District Attorney’s Office, which is conducting the ongoing criminal investigat­ion into the police shooting, and because the Black family has asked that it be withheld.

In a statement, the family said, “The family desires space to grieve and does not wish to have the final and violent moments of Gary’s distinguis­hed life be his public legacy.”

Metz insisted officers were not given a physical descriptio­n of the suspect, but he also admitted that large portions of the 911 calls and body camera videos are inaudible because of screaming and yelling.

Earlier this week, attorneys representi­ng the Black family said Jeanette Black, the wife, had told 911 operators and officer on the scene that her husband was white and wearing a bathrobe.

But Metz said that cannot be heard on the 911 audio or body camera videos. Metz promised to hire forensic audio experts to try to interpret the garbled sounds.

When Jeanette Black called 911, an operator asked whether anyone had weapons, Metz said.

“The caller asks somebody else, ‘Are there weapons?’ and the answer came back as no,” Metz said.

There was no physical descriptio­n of the suspect. The caller said the person was in the bathroom and hurting the child. The caller said there was lots of blood everywhere, Metz said.

When officers arrived on scene, however, Jeanette Black said, “He has a gun,” according to Metz, who has listened to the audio from police radio and watched the body camera footage.

Metz said he allowed the Black family to watch the videos and listen to the audio recordings.

The Black family said in its statement, “The 911 telephone call by Mrs. Black was difficult to understand as large portions are unintellig­ible. The family acknowledg­es the APD’s position that the responding officers did not receive a descriptio­n of the intruders.”

Police were first called to the neighborho­od around 1:30 a.m. after multiple people called from a party at a home on the corner of Iola Street and Montview Boulevard. Callers reported that a man, now identified as Harper, was on drugs and out of control.

Callers said he was damaging cars and had injured himself, according to Metz’s account. But many of those callers were hanging up on dispatcher­s or providing incomplete informatio­n.

One caller, when asked for his location, said, “I don’t know where I am. Just get here,” Metz said.

Harper, for unknown reasons, ran to the Black home and began pounding on the door. He knocked the door off its hinges and went inside. He grabbed the 11year-old boy sleeping on the couch and took him into a bathroom where he began choking and attempting to drown the child, Metz said.

Multiple people from the party had followed Harper into the house to try to stop him, Metz said. That contribute­d to the chaos for the officers and the Black family, he said.

After officers heard the gunshots, they saw Black walk around a corner and then turn back. He came toward them again as they ordered him to drop the gun. Black raised his flashlight toward them before the one officer fired, Metz said.

“It was that time my officer fired four rounds, causing Mr. Black to fall to the ground,” Metz said.

Metz confirmed that the officer who fatally shot Black was the same one involved in a fatal shooting in late June. Metz said the officer, who has not been identified but is a three-year department veteran, went through all the requiremen­ts necessary to come back after a shooting, including peer support and psychiatri­c services.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States