Los Angeles Times

At vigil for woman’s slain son, questions still linger

Officers shot her only child two years ago in self-defense, they said. She’s filed a suit ‘to clear Zac’s name.’ It’s become a community effort.

- SANDY BANKS sandy.banks@latimes.com

They numbered only about two dozen and barely drew a glance from diners and shoppers as they walked along Ventura Boulevard, carrying battery-powered candles that lit the night.

The lack of attention didn’t matter to them. This public vigil was a private ritual; a way to remember a young man who died too young and to embrace his grieving mother.

Two years ago, Zachary Champommie­r was shot to death by law enforcemen­t officers in a Studio City parking lot. He was 18, had just graduated from Granada Hills Charter High, played saxophone and viola in the orchestra.

His death — then and now— was cloaked in confusion and muddied by conflictin­g accounts.

Initial news reports called him a drug suspect who was shot for running down a police officer. People in my neighborho­od, where Zac grew up, called him a “band geek” with a broad smile and big heart.

Zac had borrowed his mother’s Toyota that night and driven from Porter Ranch to meet a man he’d chatted with online. But when Zac pulled into the parking lot, that man was in the midst of a scuffle with cops who’d detained him for peering into a car.

The officers were part of an undercover task force, fresh from a drug raid at a nearby house. They were “debriefing” in the parking lot — wearing street clothes and driving unmarked cars.

They said Zac accelerate­d toward them and struck a sheriff’s deputy with his car. The deputy and a DEA agent fired six shots. One killed Zac, piercing his heart and lungs.

Sheriff Lee Baca told The Times that Zac’s “aggressive actions” lent him “some degree of fault.” Investigat­ors from the Los Angeles County district attorney’s office concluded months later that the officers fired in self-defense.

For Carol Champommie­r, Zachary’s mother, those judgments only compounded the loss.

“This is an 18-year-old boy whose life was taken for no good reason in a public parking lot,” she said at the vigil on Sunday. “They didn’t tell him to put his

‘They just shot to kill.... Then they blew it off … like nobody cares that this great person was taken off this Earth that night.’

— Carol Champommie­r,

mother of Zac Champommie­r

hands up. They didn’t tell him to get out of the car. They just shot to kill....

“Then they blew it off … like nobody cares that this great person was taken off this Earth that night.”

Zac was Champommie­r’s only child. She’s a single mother; a teacher at our neighborho­od elementary school. I didn’t know Zac or his mother, but he grew up a few blocks from my house.

“I raised him to be a good person, to obey the laws,” Champommie­r said. “He didn’t smoke. He didn’t do drugs. He never even got a speeding ticket.”

She still has every essay and art project he ever did, and she hasn’t changed a thing in his bedroom. She dreams about him all the time, she said, “rememberin­g when he was a little boy” and reliving the night he died.

Champommie­r has filed a lawsuit against the Sheriff ’s Department, the LAPD and the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion, claiming not only that officers shot her son “without provoca- tion, necessity or justificat­ion,” but that they “attempted to cover up their misconduct” by lying and tampering with evidence during the investigat­ion.

The lawsuit is set for trial this fall. She wants tactical changes in law enforcemen­t, including tighter guidelines for plaincloth­es operations in public spots.

“But the driving force,” she said, “is to clear Zac’s name.”

That has become a community concern. Early accounts of his death left locals numb, said Debbie Lopez, a neighbor of mine whose son, Matt, played in the band with Zac.

“The idea that Zac had intentiona­lly sped into a group of law enforcemen­t agents and tried to harm them.... we knew immediatel­y that was wrong.”

Every few weeks for months after Zac died, his friends and their parents held “awareness vigils” near the shooting scene, carrying posters and passing out fliers, trying to find witnesses from that night.

Someone started a website, justicefor­zac.blogspot. and Champommie­r posted the coroner’s toxicology report online, showing Zac had no drugs or alcohol in his system when he died.

Parents and teachers at Beckford Elementary, where Champommie­r works and Zac went to school, have raised money in his name for the school’s orchestra program. His high school held a memorial concert, featuring songs with soloist spots “because solos were something Zac wanted to do,” Lopez said, “but he would never put himself out there for that.”

In a neighborho­od where streets are safe and support for police is broad and deep, Zac’s death has been a bewilderin­g wake-up call.

“There’s been a definite loss of innocence,” Lopez said. “You hear about kids getting in trouble, but they’re out at 1in the morning or they’re in a shady part of town. You think it’s perfectly safe in the Valley to send my child out on a Thursday night to a restaurant on Ventura Boulevard.”

I saw familiar faces at Zac’s vigil on Sunday; teenagers I recognized from the neighborho­od and parents I hadn’t seen since our kids were small.

Zac’s kindergart­en teacher was there. She’d taught my oldest daughter in first grade and raised her three children a few blocks from us. She echoed what everyone seemed to be thinking: That could have been my child.

“I’m here to support Carol,” she whispered, as we watched another mother fuss over the tea lights arranged around Zac’s picture, propped on an easel near where he was shot.

Champommie­r had written out remarks, so she could speak without breaking down. But that didn’t stop her from crying as she read a poem and rambled on with stories about her gentle, wise-cracking son.

His grandma talked about Zac’s favorite song, a weeping classmate shared a funny anecdote. Then we joined hands and stood in silence. I felt the import of the moment.

We don’t have to know exactly what happened that night to mourn a child and help his mother fill a void.

“I’m thankful to everybody,” Champommie­r told me later. “It’s the ‘ we lost him’ that comforts me. Just the we; that’s what speaks to how special he was.”

 ??  ?? CAROL CHAMPOMMIE­R poses with her son, Zac, at his high school graduation, just three weeks before he was shot to death in a Studio City parking lot.
CAROL CHAMPOMMIE­R poses with her son, Zac, at his high school graduation, just three weeks before he was shot to death in a Studio City parking lot.
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