Los Angeles Times

Sacramento to pay $ 1.7 million to parents in police shooting

Their son, Stephon Clark, 22, was holding a cellphone when he was killed in 2018.

- By Christian Martinez

The city of Sacramento will pay $ 1.7 million to the parents of Stephon Clark, who was shot to death by police while holding a cellphone in 2018, to settle the final portion of a lawsuit filed by Clark’s family, officials said Friday.

Clark, 22, was killed March 18, 2018, when Sacramento police f ired 20 shots, striking him at least seven times. Officers had chased Clark to the backyard of his grandmothe­r’s home after receiving reports of vandalism, and said that he advanced on them while holding a firearm.

Clark was holding a cellphone at the time.

Investigat­ions by local, state and federal agencies found that the shooting was within Sacramento Police Department policies and state law.

In 2019, the city settled part of the lawsuit brought by Clark’s family by providing $ 2.4 million to his two children, leaving his parents as the sole remaining plaintiffs, according to a later court ruling.

“The decision to resolve the case through a negotiated agreement comes after careful considerat­ion of all options,” Sacramento City Atty. Susana Alcala Wood said in a news release Friday. “We believe this is the best path forward for all involved parties including our community.”

Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg called Clark’s death “a tragedy that brought pain and sorrow to his family and to our entire city.”

“Everyone wishes this heartbreak­ing event had not occurred. A family lost a son, a grandson, a brother and a father,” Steinberg said in the statement.

The shooting garnered national attention and sparked massive demonstrat­ions in Sacramento.

The protests helped spur the passage of Senate Bill 1421, a police transparen­cy law that requires the release of personnel records in law enforcemen­t shootings, and Assembly Bill 392, which raised standards for when officers can use deadly force.

The Sacramento Police Department also made changes after shooting, including updating its bodycamera and foot- pursuit policies “as well as developmen­t of a comprehens­ive use- of- force policy.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? ANITA ROSS holds a photo of Stephon Clark as she and other protesters block the entrance to Sacramento City Hall in 2018, four days after Clark’s killing.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ANITA ROSS holds a photo of Stephon Clark as she and other protesters block the entrance to Sacramento City Hall in 2018, four days after Clark’s killing.

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