Los Angeles Times

Video of fatal police shooting is released

It shows a homeless man with a crowbar closing in on an Escondido officer and being shot six times.

- By Teri Figueroa Figueroa writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — Escondido police have released video of a patrol officer fatally shooting a 59-year-old homeless man who had been carrying a 2-foot crowbar while closing in on the armed officer.

In the nearly nine-minute video, which was released Thursday, police describe details of the April 21 shooting over footage from surveillan­ce and body-worn cameras. It shows the moment the officer pulled the trigger — which came after he’d backpedale­d about 65 feet and repeatedly warned

Steven John Olson to drop the object.

Police said the officer fired when Olson was about seven feet away.

Escondido police said they were familiar with Olson, who had a nearly twodecade history of arrests and was the subject of several failed attempts to get him mental health services.

State law calls for law enforcemen­t agencies to release video of fatal encounters or other critical incidents within 45 days unless it would impede the investigat­ion. Escondido released the footage about eight days after Olson was killed. Protesters twice rallied to demand release of the footage, including a gathering Thursday night after police said they would do so before the end of the week.

About 7 a.m. on the morning of the shooting, police received a report that Olson was striking cars with a metal object in the area of 2nd Avenue and Broadway. One officer stopped Olson, but he walked off. Soon, another officer, Chad Moore, who was headed to another call, came across Olson walking in the middle of Broadway.

Moore, who has been with the department for eight years, recognized Olson. The officer initially tried to talk to Olson while still in his patrol SUV, using his loudspeake­r and air horn — a de-escalation technique, police said. Olson ignored it.

The video shows Moore get out of his SUV to talk with Olson, who approaches while clutching a crowbar.

Moore pulls out his gun. Olson, muttering, continues to approach while Moore walks backward, moving from the middle of the street to the sidewalk.

Some of what Olson says at that point is hard to decipher. According to department spokesman Lt. Kevin Toth, Olson said, “You’ve got some problem, and you’re going to get hit.”

“Steven! You are gonna get shot!” the officer yells.

“I know and you are gonna get hit,” Olson replies. He continues to approach, speaking incoherent­ly.

“Steven — drop that pipe now! Drop it,” Moore orders.

Moore then opens fire. As he does, a black sedan enters the background about 20 or 30 yards behind Olson. The driver hits the brakes. Approachin­g the intersecti­on on nearby 2nd Avenue is a school bus.

Olson was shot six times. Police offered first aid until paramedics arrived and took him to a hospital, where he died.

Last month, in a videotaped statement, Escondido Police Chief Ed Varso said Olson had nearly 190 arrests over 19 years and was the subject of several attempts to get him mental health assistance.

In the video released Thursday, Toth said Olson had been arrested four times over the last year on suspicion of threatenin­g people with deadly weapons, including a box cutter, a knife, a piece of metal and a stick. He also said Olson had previously served a prison term for assault with a deadly weapon.

And, he said, Olson had been placed on five mental health holds at hospitals since 2015. This year, he was the subject of 23 calls to police, including accusation­s of assaultive behavior.

Varso said Olson had “an extensive pattern of violent criminal behavior.”

“I do not share this to vilify him,” Varso said. “Steven needed intensive help. Instead, he was placed into a seriously flawed revolvingd­oor system that processes people from jail to the streets, to services to the streets, back to jail and back to the streets.

“It is a system that relies upon a person to come to their own conclusion that they need serious help, and far too often does not end until that person finally commits a crime serious enough to be incarcerat­ed or worse.”

The footage also includes body-camera video from the first officer to respond to the initial 911 call about Olson hitting cars. That officer arrives to find an incoherent Olson, holding the crowbar and a squeegee. The officer repeatedly tells him to drop the bar, but Olson hurries off. The officer, who also was familiar with Olson, stayed to talk with witnesses. Varso said Olson’s behavior was not threatenin­g at that point.

Moments later, Moore encountere­d Olson in the street.

Toth said police did not find any damaged cars linked to the initial 911 call.

The last year has brought intensifyi­ng public scrutiny of police use of force across the country. About seven weeks ago, Escondido police said the department had codified policies to de-escalate tense situations.

In the video, Varso said his officers used force “in just 0.3% of all contacts” last year.

Moore was placed on administra­tive leave after the shooting, which is standard. Police said they expect he will be cleared to return to duty this week.

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