The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

'My baby was shot up'

Sheriff releases footage, disputes attorney’s account in describing fatal shooting of Black airman from Atlanta.

- By Stephen Smith and Mike Schneider • Associated Press

A Florida sheriff ’s deputy announced himself as law enforcemen­t just before fatally shooting a Black U.S. Air Force airman inside his apartment in the state’s Panhandle, body camera video shown to reporters Thursday shows.

Okaloosa County Sheriff Eric Aden presented the video hours after the family of Senior Airman Roger Fortson and their attorneys held a news conference in which they disputed that the deputy acted in self-defense.

Fortson is from Atlanta and graduated from McNair High School. The video from the deputy’s body

era showed Fortson answered his apartment door wi h what appears to be a handgun pointed down toward the floor. The video shows the deputy banging on the door, stepping aside, seemingly out of view of the door. Twice he shouted: “Sheriff ’s office!”

The door opened, and the deputy shouted, “Step back!” The deputy then fired off shots and shouted, “Drop the gun! Drop the gun! Do not move!” The deputy then called for paramedics on his radio.

Noted civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is representi­ng Fortson’s family, earlier had asked the sheriff ’s office for transparen­cy and disputed the narrative authoritie­s released after the May 3 shooting. An email was sent to Crump’s office Thursday afternoon seeking comment about what the body camera footage showed, as well as the sheriff ’s describing as inaccurate Crump’s statements that the deputy went to the wrong apartment and didn’t announce himself.

The deputy is seen on the video arriving at an apartment building and speaking to a woman outside who described hearing an argument. The deputy then went up an elevator and walked down an out

door hallway.

Crump told reporters earlier that Fortson had grabbed his gun because he heard someone outside his apartment, got no response when he asked who was there and discovered the peephole on his door was blocked.

“For whatever reason, they thought he was a bad guy, but he was a good guy. He was a great guy. He was an exceptiona­l guy,” Crump said. “They took a patriot from us.”

The sheriff’s office has declined to identify the responding deputies or their races. Officials have said the Florida Department of Law Enforcemen­t is investigat­ing the shooting.

Fortson’s mother, Chantemekk­i Fortson, walked into the morning news conference with Crump; she was holding a framed portrait of her son in his dress uniform. She burst into tears as Crump spoke about her son’s death inside his Fort Walton Beach apartment.

“My baby was shot up,” she said.

Crump called the shooting “an unjustifia­ble killing.”

“He was just in his apartment, minding his businesses,” Crump said. “They could have made sure they were at the right apartment. They had a duty to make sure they were at the right apartment before they busted in the door.”

In a statement last week, the sheriff ’s office said a deputy responding to a call of a disturbanc­e in progress at the apartment complex reacted in self-defense after encounteri­ng an armed man. The office did not offer details on what kind of disturbanc­e deputies were responding to or who called them.

Crump said Fortson was shot six times and died at a hospital. The deputy who shot him was placed on administra­tive leave pending an investigat­ion.

Crump said Fortson had always wanted to join the U.S. Air Force and enlisted after graduating from McNair High. He was based at the Special Operations Wing at Hurlburt Field. As a special missions aviator, one of his roles was to load the gunship’s cannons during missions.

“He was living his dream. By doing so, he was going to make it better for his mother and siblings so they could have a better chance at the American dream,” Crump said.

Fortson was talking to his girlfriend, who hasn’t yet been identified, on FaceTime when deputies burst into his apartment May 3, Crump said. Without her, his family wouldn’t have known what happened, he said. The girlfriend notified his mother, who drove to Fort Walton Beach to find out that her son was dead.

At the hospital, deputies approached Chantemekk­i Fortson, and she told them, “You guys have killed my baby. Just take me to my baby, please. I just want to see my child,” she recounted at the news conference.

FDLE spokeswoma­n Gretl Plessinger told The Associated Press on Wednesday that it is unlikely the agency will have any further comment until the investigat­ion is complete.

Crump, based in Tallahasse­e, Florida, has been involved in multiple high-profile cases involving Black people being killed by law enforcemen­t or civilians, including the deaths of Ahmaud Arbery in Brunswick, Trayvon Martin, Tyre Nichols, George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, who was killed in her home during a no-knock police raid that targeted her ex-boyfriend in 2020.

 ?? GERALD HERBERT/AP ?? Chantemekk­i Fortson, mother of Roger Fortson, a U.S. Air Force airman, is comforted by family Thursday as she holds a photo of her son during a news conference regarding his death in Fort Walton Beach, Florida. Roger Fortson, from Atlanta, was shot and killed by a sheriff’s deputy in his apartment on May 3.
GERALD HERBERT/AP Chantemekk­i Fortson, mother of Roger Fortson, a U.S. Air Force airman, is comforted by family Thursday as she holds a photo of her son during a news conference regarding his death in Fort Walton Beach, Florida. Roger Fortson, from Atlanta, was shot and killed by a sheriff’s deputy in his apartment on May 3.
 ?? ?? Attorney Ben Crump, here with U.S. Air Force airman Roger Fortson’s mother, Chantemekk­i Fortson, said Thursday that law enforcemen­t had a duty “to make sure they were at the right apartment before they busted in the door.”
Attorney Ben Crump, here with U.S. Air Force airman Roger Fortson’s mother, Chantemekk­i Fortson, said Thursday that law enforcemen­t had a duty “to make sure they were at the right apartment before they busted in the door.”
 ?? PHOTOS BY GERALD HERBERT/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Okaloosa County Sheriff Eric Aden holds a news conference Thursday at which he shared deputy body camera footage of the May 3 shooting of Roger Fortson in his Fort Walton Beach, Florida, apartment.
PHOTOS BY GERALD HERBERT/ASSOCIATED PRESS Okaloosa County Sheriff Eric Aden holds a news conference Thursday at which he shared deputy body camera footage of the May 3 shooting of Roger Fortson in his Fort Walton Beach, Florida, apartment.

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