Los Angeles Times

Police shootings rise this year

The pace is slightly above the four-year average but well below past decades.

- By Kevin Rector

LAPD reports 23 so far in 2021, including two on Monday, up from 16 a year ago.

Two separate Los Angeles police shootings Monday of men who officers said were armed with knives pushed the total number of LAPD shootings this year to 23, according to LAPD data.

That’s more than the 16 police shootings that had occurred as of this time last year, and above the fouryear average of 21 police shootings at this time of year, according to police data.

Nine of the shootings this year have been fatal, compared with five fatal shootings at this time last year and a four-year average of just over seven.

Though above levels in recent years, the total number of LAPD shootings so far this year remains well below the number of LAPD shootings tallied during similar periods in past decades. The number of shootings in the past two years were near 30year lows.

The police shootings come amid a general increase in shootings and homicides in L.A. — something LAPD Chief Michel Moore suggested was a contributi­ng factor in police officers using deadly force more often this year during a discussion with the civilian Police Commission on Tuesday morning.

“The intersecti­on I believe that we’re seeing right now is the presence of guns and also the presence of knives, and the willingnes­s of individual­s to use those,” Moore said.

The increase in LAPD shootings is in part due to incidents in which individual­s have brandished knives and other edged weapons — something that has garnered increased attention and criticism among activists and other police critics in recent months.

Both of the shootings Monday and another that Moore said occurred July 20 involved men who allegedly were armed with knives.

The first shooting Monday happened about 6 a.m. in the 3700 block of Barry Avenue in the Mar Vista neighborho­od, after officers responded to a call from a neighbor who reported a woman screaming from a neighborin­g apartment, police said.

There, Pacific Division officers found a man inside the apartment holding his elderly mother at knifepoint, Moore told the commission.

After giving multiple demands that he drop the knife, which were ignored, the man was shot, Moore said. The man, later identified as Herman Gonzalez, 58, was pronounced dead at the scene. The shooting remains under investigat­ion.

The second shooting Monday happened about 10:50 p.m. near the intersecti­on of Union Avenue and Pico Boulevard in the PicoUnion neighborho­od, Moore told the commission.

Rampart Division officers responded to the area after receiving a call about a man armed with a knife. When the man refused to comply with demands that he drop the knife, he was shot, Moore said.

The man, later identified as Samuel Soto was taken to a hospital and was expected to survive, Moore said. The incident remains under investigat­ion. Soto could not be reached for comment.

In the July 20 incident, officers in the Hollenbeck Division responded to a radio call about a man with a knife, and found a man armed with a butcher knife, Moore said.

Moore said the man “stood up from a living room couch and charged” at the officers, who moved to another location. Moore said the man then charged at them again, and one officer shot the man in the hip while a second officer deployed a Taser.

The man, later identified as Edward Joseph Rubio was taken to the hospital and was expected to survive, Moore said.

The shooting remains under investigat­ion. Rubio could not be reached for comment.

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