USA TODAY US Edition

LAPD footage shows officer fatally shooting man with fork

- Christophe­r Cann

The Los Angeles Police Department released body camera footage showing an officer fatally shoot a man who was holding a plastic fork, shedding light on the incident that led the family of the victim to hire a lawyer and drew the concern of the chief of police.

The incident began when police were dispatched to a building in the Skid Row area of downtown Los Angeles on Feb. 3 around 2:20 p.m. A person speaking with a 911 operator said a man, later identified as Jason Lee Maccani, 36, of Camarillo, walked into a warehouse studio with what looked like a stick or a pole and started “getting aggressive.”

The caller said Maccani, a graduate of UCLA, appeared homeless and was wearing a brown shirt, blue jeans and a red hat, according to the footage released Tuesday.

Officers soon arrived and met with the caller, who told them Maccani was in a fourth-floor unit, where he had access “to sharp items and metal objects.” The seven police officers went up and, inside a hallway, commanded Maccani to exit the unit with his hands up.

One of the officer’s body cameras shows Maccani emerge from the unit and, upon seeing the officers and hearing their commands, raise his hands. After an officer says “Face away from me,” Maccani turns around and begins walking backward, as demanded by the officer.

When the officer says “Hold on right there,” however, Maccani drops his arms, turns toward the officers and begins walking toward them. An officer shoots Maccani with a rubber bullet, but Maccani keeps walking. He crosses his arms across his chest and a white object can be seen in his right hand.

Surveillan­ce video from a camera in the hallway shows an officer fire two beanbag rounds at Maccani from a shotgun, and Maccani grabs the barrel.

Another officer then fires his handgun, striking Maccani in the chest.

An officer slams Maccani against a metal gate and takes him to the ground, the video shows. As he moans, police handcuff him before they roll him on to his back and begin chest compressio­ns. Blood can be seen on his forehead.

Los Angeles Fire Department paramedics responded and took Maccani to a local hospital, where he was treated for the gunshot wound but was later pronounced dead.

At the scene, police determined the white object Maccani was holding was a plastic fork, not a knife or screwdrive­r, as the officers said they had believed, according to LAPD Capt. Kelly Muniz, who gave remarks before and during the video containing body camera footage.

The officer who shot Maccani was identified by the LAPD as recently hired Caleb Garcia-Alamilla.

An obituary posted in the Ventura County Star, part of the USA TODAY Network, said Maccani is survived by his wife, parents and multiple siblings.

He was an “exceptiona­l football player” at Camarillo High School and graduated from UCLA with a degree in mechanical engineerin­g, the obituary said. He worked in his field of study in addition to teaching yoga and taking on “many other people-orientated endeavors.”

“Jason was deeply devoted to his family and his friends,” the obituary said. “He was a compassion­ate and caring person to all those he encountere­d, and, never met a stranger.”

Private memorial services were planned for early March, according to the obituary.

Mike Maccani told the Los Angeles Times his younger brother was in the midst of a “bipolar episode” when he had his deadly encounter with police. Jason Maccani had been struggling with his mental health for some time, his older brother said.

“He was never violent,” Mike Maccani told the Los Angeles Times. “That’s something that kind of disturbed me about this recent incident.”

Michael Moore, the chief of the Los Angeles Police Department, said he had “concerns” about the shooting at a city commission meeting days after the incident.

Maccani’s family has hired a lawyer and is considerin­g legal action, an NBC news station in Los Angeles reported.

According to state law, the Office of the California Attorney General went to the scene and took over prosecutor­ial oversight, Muniz said.

The police department’s use-of-force investigat­ion is in “the very early stages,” Muniz said, and investigat­ors’ “understand­ing of this incident may change as this additional evidence is collected, analyzed or reviewed.”

She said the police department does not “draw any conclusion­s about whether the officers acted consistent with our policies and the law until all the facts are known and the investigat­ion is complete.”

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