USA TODAY International Edition

Family claims ‘rush to judgment’ after shooting at mall

21-year-old killed likely ‘did not fire the rounds’

- John Bacon

The family of a black man killed by a police officer after a shooting at an Alabama mall packed with holiday shoppers demanded justice for the young man they said was killed “for no reason at all.”

Emantic Fitzgerald Bradford Jr., 21, was fatally shot Thanksgivi­ng night by a Hoover police officer at the Riverchase Galleria, a sprawling, two-story shopping mall 10 miles south of Birmingham.

Hoover police acknowledg­ed that Bradford “likely didn’t fire the rounds” that wounded an 18-year-old man and a 12-year-old girl moments before Bradford was killed. The teens were hospitaliz­ed in stable condition.

“It hurt me to the core,” Bradford’s father, Emantic Bradford Sr., said at a news conference Sunday. “They vilified my son like he was straight criminal.”

The family hired Florida civil rights lawyer Benjamin Crump to clear their son’s name. Crump said Bradford was trying to calm the situation when the officer, whose name had not been released, “rushed to judgment” and killed him.

“He saw a black man with a gun, and he made his determinat­ion that he must be a criminal,” Crump said. “They concluded their investigat­ion while E.J. was on the mall floor, bleeding out, dying.”

Crump demanded that police release video from the scene. He said it would tell the “whole story.”

The family said they found out about the shooting via social media and police never notified them or apologized.

“They killed him for no reason at all,” said Bradford’s aunt, Catherine Jewell.

Scores of protesters marched through the mall Saturday, holding a moment of silence and chanting, “No justice, no peace.”

“When we found out about this incident, there were questions from the jump,” said Carlos Chaverst, who organized the protest. “They killed an innocent black man.”

Police initially issued a statement saying two men were engaged in the “physical altercatio­n” when one drew a gun and shot the other, also wounding the girl standing nearby.

The statement said officers assigned to the mall responded to the shooting and encountere­d “a suspect brandishin­g a pistol and shot him.” Bradford was pronounced dead at the scene.

Later, police spokesman Gregg Rector issued an update.

“New evidence now suggests that while Mr. Bradford may have been involved in some aspect of the altercatio­n, he did not fire the rounds,” Rector said.

He said at least one gunman remained at large.

 ?? KIM CHANDLER/AP ?? Elijah King protests after a shooting at the Riverchase Galleria mall in Hoover, Ala., on Saturday.
KIM CHANDLER/AP Elijah King protests after a shooting at the Riverchase Galleria mall in Hoover, Ala., on Saturday.

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