Los Angeles Times

Facing the public:

Pasadena police chief talks to residents about fatal shooting.

- By Christophe­r Goffard christophe­r.goffard @latimes.com

How many police bullets actually hit Kendrec Mcdade, 19 years old and unarmed, on that dark Pasadena street? Do police have to yell “halt” or “stop” before pulling the trigger? Is it standard procedure to shoot from a patrol car? Must they shoot to kill? Why not use beanbags or rubber bullets? Where was the police camera?

Though the crowd’s manner was muted, the questions, passed forward on index cards, came unrelentin­gly to Pasadena Police Chief Phillip Sanchez as he stood in the sanctuary at New Revelation Missionary Baptist Church on Saturday morning.

The gathering was supposed to address mounting community anxiety about the late-night March 24 incident in which two white Pasadena policemen, responding to a robbery call, fatally shot Mcdade, a black Citrus College student.

Sanchez said he wanted to “start the healing process,” affirmed his “firm desire to get at the facts” and said he had asked the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Office of Independen­t Review to investigat­e the case. He asked for prayers both for the Mcdade family and for the officers who shot him.

The incident began when a911caller said that two men had stolen his backpack and that both had guns. Because of that, Sanchez said, “there is a sense of increased hypervigil­ance for the officers” who went looking for the suspects.

Police said officers were in pursuit of Mcdade, on foot and in a squad car, when Mcdade quickly approached the squad car and

‘What makes it hard to swallow is this meeting brought up more questions than answers.’

— Martin A. Gordon, a leader of the Pasadena Community Coalition, a

community group

reached for his waistband. Police said that the officer in the car, in fear for his life, unleashed a volley of shots and that the officer on foot opened fire in fear for his colleague.

Police said the caller, Oscar Carrillo, admitted to fabricatin­g the detail about the guns and has been charged with involuntar­y manslaught­er. Police said Mcdade had been a lookout as Carrillo’s backpack was stolen from his car.

Responding to the audience’s questions Saturday, Sanchez said firing from a car was “a tactic” available to police, though an unusual one. He said there was not always time to yell “freeze,” and that non-lethal weapons like beanbags were typically employed for planned events, not by police who must make instant decisions.

With the investigat­ion still underway, he said, he could not answer the question of how many times Mcdade had been shot.

Asked whether his officers had to shoot to kill Mcdade, he replied: “I can’t say. I can’t say because I wasn’t there.”

He said the police car’s camera did not record the event because the officers did not activate the vehicle’s lights and sirens, which would have turned on the camera. “They were not in emergency-response mode,” Sanchez said. “It was not shared with the officers that there was imminent danger.”

To some in the crowd, that explanatio­n made little sense. If police were “hypervigil­ant” amid a report of two armed robbers, why weren’t the lights, sirens and camera activated?

“That one was not answered very well at all. A lot of us, I could tell from the body language, weren’t satisfied,” one of the attendees, Allen Clark, 63, said after the gathering.

A Pasadena resident and retired newspaper pressman, Clark hoped to hear more than he was learning from the media. He said he admired Sanchez’s willingnes­s to face the community and was satisfied with most of his answers, but the explanatio­n for the failure to activate the camera left him uneasy.

“There’s something else going on there,” he said.

Kevin Mcdade, 38, the shooting victim’s uncle, attended the meeting and wore a look of frustratio­n afterward. “None of it makes sense,” he said. “You should know to turn your lights on so it can be videotaped on your car.”

Martin A. Gordon, a leader of the Pasadena Community Coalition, a community group, said that the meeting was necessary but that the facts of the shooting remained murky.

“What makes it hard to swallow is this meeting brought up more questions than answers,” Gordon said. “There’s just no way I can fathom the police not telling him ‘Stop, halt, you’re under arrest’ ” before shooting.

 ?? Irfan Khan
Los Angeles Times ?? PASADENA POLICE CHIEF Phillip Sanchez meets with residents at New Revelation Missionary Baptist Church to discuss the investigat­ion into the controvers­ial police shooting of 19-year-old Kendrec Mcdade.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times PASADENA POLICE CHIEF Phillip Sanchez meets with residents at New Revelation Missionary Baptist Church to discuss the investigat­ion into the controvers­ial police shooting of 19-year-old Kendrec Mcdade.

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