The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

AG: Ex-Milwaukee officers investigat­e police shooting

- By Gretchen Ehlke

MILWAUKEE >> Wisconsin’s attorney general acknowledg­ed Monday that former Milwaukee police officers, now working for the state Department of Justice, are investigat­ing the fatal shooting of a black man by a Milwaukee officer that triggered two nights of violence.

Attorney General Brad Schimel said he doesn’t see a conflict in using former Milwaukee officers in the investigat­ion into the Aug. 13 shooting of Sylville K. Smith.

Smith, 23, was killed after what Milwaukee police said was a brief foot chase when he ran from a traffic stop. A few hours after Smith’s death, a protest on the city’s largely black north side erupted into violence that reignited the following night in the Sherman Park neighborho­od.

“Milwaukee PD has about 2,000 sworn officers as I understand. The likelihood that there would be some relationsh­ip between a particular patrol officer, who’s going to be much younger than an experience­d detective... is small. And if there is any relationsh­ip at all, that officer, that investigat­or would not be permitted to have any role in the investigat­ion,” Schimel said at a news conference in downtown Milwaukee.

He said the DOJ hires many retired officers to work for the Division of Criminal Investigat­ion in the region that they have previously worked. An agency spokesman later said DCI has about 100 officers statewide; of 18 field agents in the Milwaukee office, eight once worked for the Milwaukee Police Department.

State Rep. David Bowen, who grew up in the Sherman Park neighborho­od, questioned the use of former Milwaukee officers in the investigat­ion and called for Schimel to turn the case over to the U.S. Department of Justice.

“People are crying out for transparen­cy and crying out for accountabi­lity,” said Bowen, who represents a large portion of the city’s north side.

Schimel said his investigat­ors have interviewe­d all “critical witnesses” at least once, but the investigat­ion into the fatal shooting of Smith is not yet complete. His office has been working closely with Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm, who ultimately will decide whether any charges are warranted against the officer who shot Smith, he said.

The attorney general said there are two videos from body cameras worn by two of the three officers who were at the scene of the shooting that show similar vantage points, but that no video or still shots from the video will be released until Chisholm is done with the case. There is no surveillan­ce video from the neighborho­od, he said.

While the video is a component of the investigat­ion, Schimel said it’s just one piece among many sources of informatio­n.

“They give only a narrow and incomplete glimpse of the overall picture,” he said.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Wisconsin has pressed Schimel’s office to release the body camera video. Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn said the video clearly shows Smith was holding a handgun and turned toward the officer when he was shot.

The first 30 seconds of the video has no audio. That’s because Milwaukee police body cameras are set up to continuous­ly record a 30-second buffer of video only. When an officer double-clicks his camera, the device instantly stores the past 30 seconds of video and begins adding audio only at that instant.

Schimel said it happened quickly.

“It’s not easy to see everything unless you slow it down” he said.

Smith’s family has been cooperativ­e in the investigat­ion, Schimel said. The Wisconsin Department of Justice is investigat­ing the shooting, as required by state law for any fatal shootings involving police.

 ?? MILWAUKEE COUNTY SHERIFF VIA AP, FILE ?? Sylville K. Smith, 23, was killed after what Milwaukee police said was a brief foot chase when he ran from a traffic stop.
MILWAUKEE COUNTY SHERIFF VIA AP, FILE Sylville K. Smith, 23, was killed after what Milwaukee police said was a brief foot chase when he ran from a traffic stop.

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