The Oklahoman

Autopsy shows Lyoya shot in head by officer

- Mike Householde­r and Ed White

DETROIT – An independen­t autopsy confirms that Patrick Lyoya was shot in the back of the head by a Michigan police officer while face-down on the ground, lawyers for the Black man’s family said Tuesday.

The finding by a former Detroit-area medical examiner matches what was seen last week on video released by the Grand Rapids police chief. The official autopsy report hasn’t been released to the public.

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

Spitz said he believes the gun was pressed against Lyoya’s head when the officer fired.

Lyoya was killed after a traffic stop in western Michigan on April 4. He and the white officer physically struggled on the ground before the 26-year-old refugee from Congo was shot.

Lyoya wasn’t armed. The officer was on top of him and can be heard on video demanding that he take his hand off a police Taser.

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

Crump, who has secured multimilli­on-dollar settlement­s for families of other Black men killed by police, said Lyoya could have lived until his early 80s – a “long and fruitful life.”

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

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

The officer, whose name hasn’t been released, is heard saying during a traffic stop that the license plate didn’t match the car. Lyoya declined to get back into the vehicle as ordered, and a short foot chase ensued.

Crump said it appeared to be a “classic case” of racial profiling – “driving while Black.” He noted that the officer’s patrol car video shows him backing out of a driveway in a residentia­l neighborho­od to follow the car for a few blocks. In Michigan, license plates aren’t on the front of vehicles.

Attorney Ven Johnson said Lyoya was “resisting” the officer, not fighting him.

“You never see a fist, you never see a knife, no baseball bat, no gun, no nothin’,” 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.”

State police will give their findings to the Kent County prosecutor for considerat­ion of any charges.

Lyoya’s funeral is planned for Friday at Renaissanc­e Church of God in Christ in Grand Rapids. The Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network said it will help cover the cost. He will deliver a eulogy.

 ?? PHOTO/ANNA NICHOLS AP ?? Peter Lyoya holds up a picture of his son Patrick Lyoya, 26, in his home in Lansing, Mich., last week.
PHOTO/ANNA NICHOLS AP Peter Lyoya holds up a picture of his son Patrick Lyoya, 26, in his home in Lansing, Mich., last week.

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