The Denver Post

Expert: Officer pressed gun to Patrick Lyoya’s head, then fired

- By Mike Householde­r and Ed White

DETROIT » A Michigan police officer who killed Patrick Lyoya after a traffic stop pressed the gun against his head when firing the fatal shot, an expert who performed an independen­t autopsy for the Black man’s family said Tuesday.

Dr. Werner Spitz confirmed what was seen last week on video: Lyoya was shot in the back of the head while facedown on the ground during a vigorous struggle with a white Grand Rapids officer on April 4.

Spitz appeared at a news conference with lawyers for Lyoya’s family, who said they believe video collected and released by police shows that the 26-yearold refugee from Congo was resisting the officer, not fighting him.

“You never see a fist, you never see a knife, no baseball bat, no gun, no nothin’,” Ven Johnson said. “This was not a deadly force scenario. Never gave a warning: ‘Halt or I’m going to shoot you’ or other words that we can all imagine.”

Spitz said he believes the gun was pressed against Lyoya’s head when the officer fired, based on the condition of a bone in the head.

“There’s no question what killed this young man. ... It was a powerful bullet,” said Spitz, holding a skull to show where the bullet entered the head.

Spitz performed the autopsy last weekend at a funeral home. The 95-year-old forensic pathologis­t participat­ed in the assassinat­ion investigat­ions of President John F. Kennedy and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., among other high-profile cases.

“We can confirm that Patrick Lyoya was shot in the back of his head,” attorney Ben Crump said. “That is now scientific evidence of this tragic killing and what his family believes was an execution.”

The official autopsy report is part of the state police investigat­ion and hasn’t been released to the public.

Lyoya’s death has outraged his family as well as many people who have watched video of the confrontat­ion with an officer.

Crump said Lyoya could have lived until his early 80s — a “long and fruitful life.” A lawsuit hasn’t been filed, though Johnson signaled that one was in the works.

Crump has been involved in multimilli­on-dollar settlement­s between U.S. cities and the families of Black men killed by police. His legal team has argued that the costly deals should inspire police department­s to change practices and improve their accountabi­lity to the public.

Lyoya, who wasn’t armed, was killed after a traffic stop in Grand Rapids in western Michigan. The officer was on top of him and can be heard on video demanding that he take his hand off a police Taser.

Earlier, the officer is heard saying that the license plate didn’t match the car Lyoya had been driving. Lyoya declined to get back into the vehicle as ordered, and a short foot chase ensued.

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