Las Vegas Review-Journal

Year after fatal shooting, pain remains

Family, others seek answers, changes over killing by police

- By MIKE BLASKY LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL

Rondha Gibson still owns the white 1991 Cadillac, although she can barely look at it.

The car, named “Baby Grace” af- ter her granddaugh­ter, was once the pride of her husband’s life. But now it’s stored away at a friend’s house, riddled with bullet holes, filled with broken glass and bloodstain­s.

Gulf War veteran Stanley LaVon Gibson, 43, died in the driver’s seat of that car one year ago today after a Las Vegas police officer shot him in the head with an AR-15 rifle.

His death prompted a federal Almanac 15A | Bridge 4E | Business 1D | Classified 1F | Comics 4D | Crosswords 4E | Lotteries 3A | Movies 5E Obituaries 4B | Opinion 6B | Scoreboard 8C | Television 6E

investigat­ion of the Metropolit­an Police Department, sweeping changes to use-offorce policies and a grand jury review.

His death also led to the worst year of Rondha’s life — a tearful funeral, sleepless nights, eager lawyers, family strife and constant second-guessing.

Much has changed since the events of Dec. 12, 2011. Only the Cadillac remains the same. MEMORIES OF FATEFUL DAY

“It’s hard to believe it’s been a year,” Rondha Gibson said.

Scarcely a minute goes by without her mind traveling to that day. Could she have done anything more?

Stanley Gibson was confused and disoriente­d that morning at the Alondra apartments at 2451 N. Rainbow Blvd., near Smoke Ranch Road.

Officers went to the complex on a call about a prowler and used two patrol cars to box in Gibson’s car.

Thought to be suffering from post- traumatic stress disorder, Gibson was off his medication­s and acting erraticall­y. In the days before the shooting, police had taken him to a hospital for a mental evaluation. He recently had moved to a nearby apartment complex, and in his last phone call to his wife, he said he couldn’t find his way home.

Gibson never threatened anyone and was not armed, but he refused to get out of the car. After a 30-minute standoff, police supervisor­s used a beanbag shotgun — a weapon designed to subdue but not kill — to shoot out at least one window so that they could toss in a chemical irritant to force him to open his door.

But something went wrong. When the shotgun was fired, officer Jesus Arevalo, a nine-year veteran of the department who was covering the car with his assault rifle, fired at least seven shots, killing Gibson. HISTORY OF SHOOTINGS BY POLICE

Troubling in its own right, the killing came just days after publicatio­n of a Review-Journal investigat­ion of police shootings that found Las Vegas police slow to change and reluctant to hold officers accountabl­e after using deadly force. Gibson’s death and the newspaper’s investigat­ion prompted the Nevada chapters of the American Civil Liberties Union and National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People to call for a U.S. Department of Justice investigat­ion, which began in February.

Sheriff Doug Gillespie began an internal review. In July, he announced a new use-of-force policy intended to reduce shootings by de-escalating situations and emphasizin­g respect for human life.

Gillespie also made changes to the Use of Force Review Board, broadening the scope of a panel criticized for being a rubber stamp.

The Justice Department’s report, completed last month, confirmed the Review-Journal’s findings, also revealing inconsiste­nt training, cumbersome policies and tactical errors related to police shootings.

Gillespie pledged to implement the suggestion­s and said many had already been put in place.

In 2010 and 2011, Las Vegas police had a combined 43 on-duty shootings. Las Vegas police killed a record 12 people in 2011. There have been 10 Las Vegas police shootings this year, four of which were fatal.

Critics say it’s impossible to know yet whether the changes will make a lasting difference.

“Until you actually see discipline and change from Metro you can’t say there’s been real reform,” said Richard Boul-

ware, vice president of the local NAACP. PAINFUL AFTERMATH

Rondha Gibson doesn’t care about any of that. She only knows how painful life can be.

“It still feels like it was yesterday. I don’t know how I’m supposed to feel. Am I supposed to be mad? Angry?” she asked. “People are telling me to move on with my life, but I can’t move on. You can’t move on if you don’t have answers, and that’s all there is to it. Nothing has changed.”

Stanley’s mother, Celestine Gibson, and his brother, Rudy, sued the police department in May.

Rondha hired her own lawyer. Her lawsuit would be filed either late Tuesday or early today, a symbolic gesture on the anniversar­y of Stanley’s death.

She said she doesn’t care whether she receives money from police. That won’t bring back her husband.

“Who cares about money? I don’t. That’s been my motto all along. I was struggling with Stan, I’m struggling now, and I’ll struggle without him,” she said.

Rudy, a state veterans representa­tive for Nevada Job Connect, acknowledg­ed he hasn’t been as outspoken as Rondha. But he said his brother’s death has eaten away at him for months.

“I’ve spent the better part of a year struggling with (the fact) that I couldn’t help the most important veteran in my life — my brother,” Rudy said. “It’s taken me a long time to come to grips with that and realize I did all I could for him.”

He chose the anniversar­y of his brother’s death to make a written public statement: “I do not feel that Stan is at peace. There is so much controvers­y surroundin­g that night and I feel my family and I will never have all of the answers because Metro refuses to provide them.” ‘JUSTICE DELAYED IS JUSTICE DENIED’

District Attorney Steve Wolfson has convened a grand jury to investigat­e the shooting, but no informatio­n has been made public, and it’s unclear whether he is seeking an indictment.

Rondha won’t feel at peace until she knows why Arevalo fired upon her husband that night. She believes a coroner’s inquest will be necessary and has campaigned for one.

In early 2011, county commission­ers adopted changes that prompted police to file lawsuits alleging the inquests violated their due process rights. The process stalled in the court system and is being reworked by the commission.

“The Stanley Gibson shooting, if nothing else, reiterates the absolute need to actually do the coroner’s inquest the way the county commission had designed them to be back in 2010,” said Allen Lichtenste­in, Nevada ACLU general counsel.

In its place, Las Vegas police and the district attorney’s office began releasing internal reviews of police shootings. But neither agency has released any reports on Gibson’s death.

A Las Vegas police spokesman declined comment.

Boulware said Gibson’s death is proof that more changes are needed.

“The saddest thing is here we are, a year later, and progress is slow at best,” he said. “Justice delayed is justice denied, as far as I’m concerned.”

Rondha said the future feels bleak without her husband, whom she met in 2000 and married in 2003.

“Maybe I shouldn’t look at it that way, but I can’t help it. Nobody knows how much this has changed my life. I don’t like me, I don’t like who I am. I used to love the public,” she said.

“Now I’m looking over my shoulder.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? lvrj.com/multimedia
lvrj.com/multimedia
 ?? COURTESY OF RONDHA GIBSON ?? Rondha Gibson, widow of slain Gulf War veteran Stanley Gibson, stands next to his 1991 Cadillac Brougham earlier this year. Gibson, 43, was shot and killed by Las Vegas police while sitting in the vehicle on Dec. 12, 2011.
COURTESY OF RONDHA GIBSON Rondha Gibson, widow of slain Gulf War veteran Stanley Gibson, stands next to his 1991 Cadillac Brougham earlier this year. Gibson, 43, was shot and killed by Las Vegas police while sitting in the vehicle on Dec. 12, 2011.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States