Chattanooga Times Free Press

Black man shot dead in California just after police arrived

- BY JULIE WATSON AND ANDREW DALTON

EL CAJON, Calif. — Police in the San Diego suburb of El Cajon shot and killed a black man a minute after arriving near a strip mall to investigat­e a report of a mentally unstable person walking in and out of traffic, an official said Wednesday.

El Cajon Police Department spokesman Lt. Rob Ransweiler said two officers arrived at the scene at about 2:10 p.m. Tuesday. Ransweiler said the shooting happened at 2:11 p.m.

He said police received the report about the mentally unstable person at 12:57 p.m. but did not immediatel­y respond because they had other calls for service.

Police have said the man refused to comply with instructio­ns to remove a hand from his pants pocket, paced back and forth, then rapidly drew an object from the pocket, placed both hands together and extended them in a “shooting stance.” The officers simultaneo­usly fired a handgun and an electric stun gun.

The victim was identified as Alfred Olango, a refugee from Uganda, as dozens of demonstrat­ors protesting his killing gathered outside the police station in El Cajon, holding signs that read “No Killer Cops!” and chanting “no justice, no peace,” and “black lives matter.”

Agnes Hassan, originally from Sudan, described Olango as an educated man with mental problems. She said she spent time in a refugee camp with Olango and that both of them suffered getting to the United States.

The man died after one El Cajon officer fired an electronic stun gun and another officer simultaneo­usly fired his firearm several times, El Cajon Police Chief Jeff Davis told reporters at a news conference late Tuesday night. Davis did not describe the object, but he acknowledg­ed it was not a weapon.

Christophe­r Rice-Wilson, associate director of the civil rights group Alliance San Diego, questioned why one of the officers felt non-lethal force was appropriat­e while the other did not. Both officers have been put on administra­tive leave while the incident is investigat­ed, per department policy.

Rice-Wilson was among those who identified Olango on Wednesday. Police Lt. Rob Ransweiler said he could not confirm the victim’s name but said he was in his 30s and believed to be from Uganda.

Some protesters said Tuesday night Olango was shot while his hands were raised in the air. Police disputed that and produced a frame from a cellphone video taken by a witness that appeared to show the man in the “shooting stance” as two officers approached with weapons drawn at a strip mall.

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