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Tag: bodycam video

  • Bodycam video shows Ohio shoplifting suspect pulling gun on police officer

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    A police officer in Canton, Ohio, is lucky to be alive after an accused shoplifter pointed a gun in his face and pulled the trigger. The whole incident was captured on body cam video.The video is in the player above, however, viewer discretion advised Canton police were called to the Walmart on Thursday afternoon for two people shoplifting.Police took 23-year-old Katerina Jeffrey and 21-year-old Shane Newman into custody after being accused of shoplifting.Before the two sat down, Newman was patted down.”Nothing on you that’s going to poke me, stab me?” the police officer asked Newman.Newman replied no.Minutes passed as the officer asked the two people for their names.After giving the officer a fake name, video showed Newman pulling a gun out of a pouch he was hiding. He shot the gun, but it did not go off. He then tried to reload and pointed it at the officer again.The theft prevention officer then jumped on Newman, causing him to drop the gun.The officer brought Newman to the ground and called for backup.Officers later found two bullets in Jeffrey’s pocket, who also had two warrants out for her arrest.Newman had one warrant of his own and was holding onto several pills.Jeffrey is facing a robbery charge and Newman is facing several charges, including assaulting a peace officer and attempted murder.

    A police officer in Canton, Ohio, is lucky to be alive after an accused shoplifter pointed a gun in his face and pulled the trigger.

    The whole incident was captured on body cam video.

    The video is in the player above, however, viewer discretion advised

    Canton police were called to the Walmart on Thursday afternoon for two people shoplifting.

    Police took 23-year-old Katerina Jeffrey and 21-year-old Shane Newman into custody after being accused of shoplifting.

    Before the two sat down, Newman was patted down.

    “Nothing on you that’s going to poke me, stab me?” the police officer asked Newman.

    Newman replied no.

    Minutes passed as the officer asked the two people for their names.

    After giving the officer a fake name, video showed Newman pulling a gun out of a pouch he was hiding. He shot the gun, but it did not go off.

    He then tried to reload and pointed it at the officer again.

    The theft prevention officer then jumped on Newman, causing him to drop the gun.

    The officer brought Newman to the ground and called for backup.

    Officers later found two bullets in Jeffrey’s pocket, who also had two warrants out for her arrest.

    Newman had one warrant of his own and was holding onto several pills.

    Jeffrey is facing a robbery charge and Newman is facing several charges, including assaulting a peace officer and attempted murder.

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  • Faith guides Fort Worth police officers who saved baby after crash

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    Fort Worth police officers who rescued an infant from an overturned car say prayer and faith guided them through the tense moments.

    Sgt. Ryan Nichols and Officer Edwin Bounds were on duty about 9:30 a.m. when a car rolled in front of them on Interstate 30 between Eastchase Parkway and Cooks Lane. “The accident happened directly in front of me. I watched the rollover,” Bounds said.

    At a press conference on Tuesday, the two men in uniform stood in front of a projector displaying a body-camera video that captured how they rescued a 1-year-old baby girl pinned under a car, tears filling their eyes as they watched.

    The footage from the Oct. 23 accident shows the officers sprinting toward an overturned car as bystanders try to help. One officer crawls underneath to reach the limp infant and pulls her out. “She has a pulse,” one of the officers says as they immediately start CPR, pressing her tiny chest.

    “Keep going, Mama,” Bounds says in the video as the baby makes faint noises and later cries. By 9:40 a.m., on the camera timestamp, medics arrive and rush her into the ambulance, as seen in the video.

    “We thought she was dead. But we’re not going to sit there and just do nothing. So we began to work, just praying on the inside that the Lord was going to just work the problem for us,” Nichols said.

    Fort Worth Police Officer Edwin Bounds, left, and Sgt. Ryan Nichols talk about their experience of saving a one-year-old child trapped under an overturned vehicle 1-year-that crashed on Interstate 30 during a press conference on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025.
    Fort Worth police Officer Edwin Bounds, left, and Sgt. Ryan Nichols talk about their experience of saving a 1-year-old child trapped under an overturned vehicle that crashed on Interstate 30. The officers spoke during a press conference on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com

    “When we first pulled her out and turned her on her side, my first thought was to reach into her mouth and just pull out any kind of grass or dirt or anything that could get lost in her airway to make sure that she can breathe,” Bounds said.

    “If you have any kind of training, you try to fall back on it. You don’t remember everything — you just try to do something that works and keep going,” Nichols said. “That baby breathed and everybody else on that scene was able to take a breath.”

    “That was the first glimmer of hope that I saw, and maybe the first time that I was actually able to take a breath for myself,” Bounds added. He said he could not sleep that night because he was thinking about the baby, and he went to Cook Children’s Medical Center the next morning to check on her.

    Community members stepped up

    Sgt. Nichols and Officer Bounds, both dads to three children and who have been in law enforcement for almost two decades, said more than 20 community members in the area of the crash stopped by to help.

    Every person on scene was trying to figure out how they could help, and “they just stepped up and got it done,” Nichols said.

    Bounds said, “I want people to realize that there are good people in this world, and the video shows it.”

    “Faith drives every decision we do or don’t make out here, drives how we treat people, the love we try to show the community,” Nichols added.

    Police Chief Eddie Garcia said, “I remember watching the bodycam video myself, and I got emotional.”

    The actions of the two officers are “the representation of the hearts of not only police officers in Fort Worth but across the state of Texas and in this country, and far too often, these good deeds go unnoticed,” Garcia said.

    “At the end of the day, we are dads, we are moms, we are brothers, we are sisters,” Garcia said. “You know, people talk about how they were able to move the car and everything — these guys used dad strength; and whether it’s dad strength or mom strength, whatever you’ve got, they treated that baby as if it was their own.”

    The infant was taken by ambulance to a local hospital, and is doing well, according to police. Both she and her mother are expected to fully recover.

    Fort Worth Police Officer Edwin Bounds watches a video of him and Sgt. Ryan Nichols saving a one-year-old child trapped under an overturned vehicle 1-year-that crashed on Interstate 30 during a press conference on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025.
    Fort Worth police Officer Edwin Bounds watches a video of him and Sgt. Ryan Nichols saving a 1-year-old child trapped under an overturned vehicle that crashed on Interstate 30. The officers spoke during a press conference on Tuesday, Oct. 28, 2025. Amanda McCoy amccoy@star-telegram.com

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  • WATCH: Fort Worth police save life of baby girl pinned under car after crash

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    Two officers helped to save the life of a baby girl who was pinned under a car in a rollover crash Thursday on Interstate 30, Fort Worth police said in a social media post and video.

    Officers were called to the major accident on I-30 between Eastchase Parkway and Cooks Lane about 9:30 a.m. According to the 911 call details, a mother and her 1-year-old daughter had been thrown from the vehicle, police said.

    The arriving officers immediately started looking for the child. Body-camera footage shows the vehicle overturned in the grassy area along I-30.

    “Under here. We need to move the car,” someone can be heard saying.

    Witnesses who’d seen the crash helped the officers push the car up enough to free the infant. The little girl was unconscious, and Sgt. Nichols started performing CPR, according to police.

    A Fort Worth police officer gave CPR to a 1-year-old girl after the child and her mother were ejected from a car that crashed on Interstate 30 on Thursday, Oct 23, 2025. The mother and baby are expected to make a full recovery.
    A Fort Worth police officer gave CPR to a 1-year-old girl after the child and her mother were ejected from a car that crashed on Interstate 30 on Thursday, Oct 23, 2025. The mother and baby are expected to make a full recovery. Screenshot from bodycam video/Fort Worth Police Department

    “She has a pulse. Is she breathing, though?” one of the officers asks.

    The officers continue to work with the child, and a short time later she makes some faint noises and starts to cry. The infant was taken by ambulance to a local hospital, and is doing well, according to police. Both she and her mother are expected to fully recover.

    “We are beyond proud of the life saving actions performed by Sgt. Nichols and Officer Bounds for their bravery and quick response to this terrible scene,” officials said in the post. “We are also grateful to the Fort Worth citizens who saw someone in danger and, without hesitation, assisted our officers.

    This story was originally published October 24, 2025 at 2:51 PM.

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  • Aurora PD releases 911 call, bodycam video from police shooting that killed 17-year-old

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    AURORA, Colo. — Aurora Police Chief Todd Chamberlain on Friday released the 911 call and officer body-camera video from a police shooting that killed a 17-year-old boy last week.

    The shooting happened on Sept. 18 at the Conoco gas station in the 200 block of South Havana Street near East Alameda Avenue.

    In a press conference Friday, Chamberlain said the incident began at 7:33 p.m. when the suspect — identified as 17-year-old Blaze Aleczander Balle-Mason — called 911 and told the operator he had a loaded 9mm pistol in his pocket and planned to “shoot up” the gas station and surrounding area. He also reportedly said he wanted to shoot responding officers.

    Three officers arrived at the scene at 7:43 p.m. with a “tactical plan” in which one officer was armed with a rifle, the second with a pistol and the third with a “40mm less-lethal launcher.”

    Chamberlain said his officers approached the suspect, identified themselves as police and ordered the teen to show his hands. The 17-year-old ignored those commands, according to the police chief, and advanced toward the officers with one hand concealed in his pocket.

    The officer with the “less-lethal launcher” fired “multiple rounds” at the 17-year-old, striking him, according to Chamberlain. The rounds, however, had “little to no impact or effect” on the suspect.

    Chamberlain said his officers retreated around the corner, and the suspect began to “chase” police. The teen’s hand remained in his pocket, according to the police chief.

    As the suspect neared the officers, one officer fired his weapon, striking the 17-year-old. Officers provided life-saving measures until medical personnel arrived.

    The teen was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

    • Watch Chief Chamberlain’s full press conference in the video player below

    Aurora PD releases bodycam video from police shooting that killed 17-year-old: Full press conference

    According to Chamberlain, the time between when officers first made contact with the suspect and when shots were fired was 15 seconds.

    Investigators did not recover a handgun; however, Chamberlain cited the suspect’s 911 call, his failure to show his hands, the ineffectiveness of the “less-lethal” rounds, and his advancement toward officers as reasons for the lethal action.

    “This incident — and there is no getting around this — this incident is tragic for everyone involved, and I mean that sincerely, for everybody involved,” Chamberlain said. “I mean, it’s tragic for the suspect. It’s tragic for the people that were there, that witnessed [it]. It’s tragic for the city of Aurora. It’s also incredibly tragic for the officers that were involved in this.”

    Denver7 has been working to get answers about the police shooting, including why a mental health crisis team wasn’t dispatched, considering the teen threatened violence against officers in his 911 call.

    “They are not for calls that involved active violence or the threat of active violence, and that’s what this call was,” Chamberlain responded. “This call was not a mental health call…. [Officers] are trained also in crisis intervention. Every member of our organization goes through a suicide by cop training… they understand de-escalation. So all of that stuff is part of what they have in their toolkit, all of that was exploited, all of that was used.”

    Aurora

    Chief shares why mental health officers did not respond to Aurora PD shooting

    The Sept. 18 incident comes just weeks after Aurora police shot and killed Rajon Belt-Stubblefield, an unarmed Black man, after a confrontation following a traffic stop. Chamberlain said in both cases, his officers worked to prevent lethal force but were forced to use it.

    “In both of these cases, whether people like it or not, the suspects’ actions created these rapidly evolving, life-threatening situations,” Chamberlain said Friday. “Our officers exploited de-escalation; our officers exploited communication; our officers attempted to exploit other tools and alternatives other than lethal force. Unfortunately, on both of these incidents, the suspect and the suspects did not allow that to occur. That is not something that is unknown; that is factual data. That is factual information that we have seen through the collection of evidence at this point in both of these investigations.”

    Xavier Davis, president and lead mentor for ROYAL mentoring group, works with at-risk youth to stop violence in Aurora and Denver.

    “We got two people that lost their lives that were unarmed,” he said of the recent police shootings of the Aurora teen and Rajon Belt-Stubblefield. “The shootings, the killings, are just, they’re just totally unnecessary.”

    Davis said both adults and young people that he works with are feeling more on edge than ever because of economic uncertainty, which is something police should be aware of. He is also calling for changes to police training.

    “We would rather him be in a hospital with a bullet in his leg than dead,” Davis said of the shooting victims. “When you have shootings like this, it creates more of a distrust with the community.”

    Police said this incident is being investigated internally and by the district attorney’s office.

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