Albuquerque Journal

Attorney accepts Black man’s death was suicide

Family outraged at determinat­ion, despite his prior mental health history

- BY STEFANIE DAZIO AND CHRISTOPHE­R WEBER ASSOCIATED PRESS

LOS ANGELES — The attorney for the family of a Black man found hanging from a tree in a Southern California city park last month on Friday did not dispute investigat­ors’ findings ruling the death a suicide.

The family of Robert Fuller was absorbing the news and grieving, their lawyer Jamon R. Hicks, said at a press conference.

“I have no informatio­n to suggest foul play. I have no informatio­n to suggest that anything was racially motivated,” Hicks said.

The manner of Fuller’s death on June 10 in Palmdale intensifie­d the racial angst that already was at a boiling point following the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Family members said they couldn’t imagine Fuller, 24, taking his own life and community activists noted the Antelope Valley area north of Los Angeles where the death occurred has a history of racist incidents.

At a news conference Thursday to announce the findings of a follow-up investigat­ion, it was revealed that Fuller had a history of mental illness and suicidal tendencies.

Sheriff’s Cmdr. Chris Marks outlined three hospitaliz­ations since 2017 where Fuller told doctors he was considerin­g taking his life. The last was in November, when he was being treated for depression at a hospital in Nevada and “disclosed that he did have a plan to kill himself,” Marks said.

Marks also said Las Vegas police investigat­ed an incident in February in which Fuller “allegedly tried to light himself on fire.”

No video of the death or witnesses to the suicide were found.

Marks said a red rope consistent with the one at the death site was purchased a month earlier at a Dollar Tree store with a public assistance benefits card registered to Fuller. There was no video of the transactio­n, but detectives found videos showing Fuller made subsequent purchases with the card.

Fuller’s hands were not bound, his clothing and appearance were neat, he wore a hat and backpack, and had a knife in a pocket, Marks said. There were no signs of struggle or defensive wounds. Fuller’s left wrist had prominent scars consistent with “suicidal intent,” Marks said.

An initial autopsy was conducted the day after Fuller was found and homicide detectives requested a full autopsy, Marks said.

Marks said that on June 12, detectives had a brief interview with a family member who reported a possible prior mental health history, and the death was deemed a suicide.

DNA testing found the predominan­t contributo­r to samples from the ligature and Fuller’s fingernail­s were from Fuller, he said.

That determinat­ion of suicide outraged Fuller’s family. They hired an attorney who said an independen­t autopsy would be conducted, and the FBI and state attorney general’s office pledged to monitor the investigat­ion.

His family and friends described him as a peacemaker who loved music and video games, and mostly stayed to himself. He went to a Black Lives Matter protest days before he died, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Racism has plagued Palmdale for years with residents of color blamed for crime and gang problems.

 ??  ?? Robert Fuller
Robert Fuller

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