Los Angeles Times

Shooting death prompts protests

Lawyer for the Black man’s family disputes official account that video showed a gun.

- By Richard Winton

Anthony McClain, a Black man, was shot while f leeing police in Pasadena.

Following the police shooting of a Black man in Pasadena on Saturday night, protesters are demanding that city leaders hold law enforcemen­t accountabl­e for the man’s death, but authoritie­s say the law — and police body camera video — justify the shooting.

Standing atop an SUV outside Mayor Terry Tornek’s home on Wednesday night, Jasmine Richards, who heads the local Black Lives Matter chapter, led a group of protesters questionin­g the shooting death of Anthony McClain.

The 32-year-old was shot and killed during a traffic stop over the weekend. Police have said the man pulled a handgun while running from officers.

“They think killing Black people is a joke,” Richards said.

Pasadena Police Chief John Perez said that multiple investigat­ions will be conducted and that video from one of the officer’s body cameras shows McClain had a gun in his hand, a contention that an attorney for the McClain family disputes.

On Thursday, authoritie­s released several videos as well as a photograph of a semiautoma­tic pistol they said was recovered at the scene of the shooting near La Pintoresca Park.

The fatal encounter began about 8 p.m. Saturday when two officers spotted a four-door Infinity that did not have a front license plate and pulled the vehicle over in the 1300 block of North Raymond Avenue. Police determined the driver had a suspended license, Perez said, and officers ordered McClain and the driver to step out of the vehicle.

Video shows that McClain, however, ran off with what appears to be something shiny around his waistband. In a descriptio­n of the video, police said that it was a handgun and that in a slow-motion version, the object can be seen in his left hand as he runs away before turning his head back toward the pursuing officers.

“You can see the weapon begin to turn with the body,” Perez said.

But Caree Harper, the McClain family’s attorney, said what police saw on the video was a large metal belt buckle.

“We believe the area that police say it was a weapon was, in fact, his Michael Kors belt,” Harper said.

An officer who ran after McClain fired two shots, striking him once near his ribcage, police said.

McClain continued running for about 50 yards before tossing his weapon, Perez said, and collapsing about 20 yards later. He was taken to a hospital, where he died from his injuries.

Police said the gun found was illegally assembled, with different serial numbers. A witness told authoritie­s McClain was seen tossing the weapon as he ran. But the Police Department did not say Thursday whether it could forensical­ly connect McClain to the weapon.

The officers involved in the shooting have less than five years on the force, authoritie­s said, and one of their body cameras did not work during the fatal encounter.

The department has pledged to identify the officers but has expressed concerns about their safety. The law requires that the names of law enforcemen­t officials involved in fatal shootings be released but allows department­s to withhold identities when a specific threat exists.

Perez said the shooting meets a state law enacted last year that tightened California’s standard for the use of deadly force from “reasonable” to “necessary,” noting that McClain posed an “imminent threat.”

The law allows officers to use deadly force to apprehend a f leeing person for any felony that threatens or results in death or serious bodily injury, and if the officer reasonably believes the person will cause death or serious bodily injury to another unless immediatel­y apprehende­d.

In the aftermath of Saturday’s shooting, a crowd gathered at the park, breaking through police tape surroundin­g the scene. One man shouted and cursed at officers as protesters gathered nearby.

The outburst caused one officer to fire a stun gun into the man’s chest, dropping him to the ground, body camera video shows.

Police then discharged pepper spray at the angry, surging crowd, striking a 10year-old, whose mother, in turn, pepper-sprayed an officer who tried to check on the child.

In the days since the shooting, protesters have gathered outside Tornek’s house as well as the home of Pasadena Councilman Victor Gordo to demand the release of the body camera video and security camera footage from the scene. They also want the officers charged in McClain’s death.

The City Council next week will consider implementi­ng a police oversight commission into the shooting, Tornek said. But critics want an independen­t police audit, citing previous questionab­le shooting deaths of Black men in Pasadena, including the 2012 killing of 19year-old Kendrec McDade.

McDade was shot seven times after a 911 caller falsely reported that the Azusa High School graduate was carrying a gun when he and a friend stole a laptop. The caller eventually pleaded guilty to falsely reporting a criminal offense, and the district attorney’s office cleared officers Jeff Newlen and Matthew Griffin of wrongdoing in the shooting.

A later independen­t report found that Pasadena police failed during their investigat­ion to determine whether witnesses could corroborat­e or refute the officers’ claims that McDade had been clutching at his waistband as he fled from their squad car before being shot.

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