The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Teen detained in case that led to fatal police shooting

- By Errin Haines Whack

PITTSBURGH » Police made an arrest in a drive-by shooting that started a chain of events resulting in the police killing of a black teenager.

The teenager under arrest was with the victim, 17-year-old Antwon Rose Jr., the night he was shot by police, authoritie­s said Tuesday.

Authoritie­s said Rose and the arrested teen fled after being pulled over June 19 on suspicion they had involvemen­t with the drive-by shooting.

Police shot Rose three times, leading to daily protests around Pittsburgh.

Investigat­ors have not said whether they believe Rose had any involvemen­t in the earlier violence that left one wounded. Two guns were recovered from the car they were riding in, and an empty gun magazine was found in Rose’s pants pocket.

In video of the fatal shooting taken from a nearby home, Rose, in a gray shirt, is the first to run from the vehicle.

The arrest came as dozens of protesters returned to the streets of downtown Pittsburgh, blocking traffic with locked arms and raised fists, demanding justice in Rose’s death.

Chanting, “Who did this? The police did this!” and “Three shots to the back, how do you justify that?” marchers began walking several blocks shortly after 7:30 a.m., shutting down busy intersecti­ons for more than two hours.

The crowd made stops at the county and city courthouse­s, pausing regularly to recall the black teenager in moments of silence a week after he was shot.

Wearing a black T-shirt with the word “ENDANGERED” printed in red, white and blue, protest leader Nicki Jo Dawson told the crowd: “This isn’t something to do for fun.”

“This isn’t a hobby,” Dawson said. “We do this to get justice we’ve never seen. In this courthouse, there’s a man who refuses to indict an (officer) for killing one of our children. Not today.”

Some passers-by raised their fists in solidarity, while others — including several commuters — shouted and honked in frustratio­n. Pittsburgh police flanked the protester route.

Christian Carter, a friend of Rose’s, read the 2016 poem Rose wrote, “I Am Not What You Think,” in which he discussed not wanting his mother to lose him to violence and not wanting to become a statistic.

In the days since Rose was fatally shot by a white police officer, marchers have demonstrat­ed almost daily. They refrained from protest Monday, as Rose was laid to rest, out of respect for his family. the residence at the time of the assault.

One man, Nicholas Minor, 23, testified he and several other friends had checked on the intoxicate­d woman’s condition several times during the evening after she passed out on the bed in an upstairs room. Minor testified that sometime after 1 a.m. he went upstairs to check on the woman again and observed Rossi, his pants down around his ankles, on top of the woman and sexually assaulting her.

Minor testified he heard the woman mumble, “Stop” and “No,” and said he then entered the bedroom and pulled Rossi off of the woman. Testimony revealed that no one at the party called 911 or police immediatel­y after the incident.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE AP ?? People start a protest march against the shooting death of Antwon Rose Jr. on Tuesday, in Pittsburgh. Rose was fatally shot by a police officer seconds after he fled a traffic stop June 19, in the suburb of East Pittsburgh.
KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE AP People start a protest march against the shooting death of Antwon Rose Jr. on Tuesday, in Pittsburgh. Rose was fatally shot by a police officer seconds after he fled a traffic stop June 19, in the suburb of East Pittsburgh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States