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Tag: Officer involved shooting

  • Fort Collins police release video of deadly gunfight in cemetery following rollover crash

    Fort Collins police release video of deadly gunfight in cemetery following rollover crash

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    FORT COLLINS, Colo. — Police in Fort Collins released on Wednesday video from body-worn cameras of the July police shooting that resulted in the death of 43-year-old Clayton Pierce, an armed suspect who shot and wounded an officer during an exchange of gunfire following a vehicle crash.

    On July 21, police received reports of a single-vehicle rollover crash at the intersection of Bryan Avenue and Mountain Avenue near Grandview Cemetery. When officers arrived on the scene, Pierce “exited the vehicle with a firearm and exchanged gunfire with officers” and fled into the cemetery.

    During the gunfight, an officer was shot in the arm and transported to the hospital. Police said the officer is recovering well.

    Police later found Peirce hiding in the cemetery, and “Pierce was observed raising his gun again.” Police shot the suspect and later placed him in custody. He was transported to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced deceased.

    Video released Wednesday shows the gunfight in the residential street where the crash occurred and the shooting in the cemetery. Watch the videos here. [Warning: graphic].

    Following an investigation, the 8th Judicial District Attorney’s Office determined that the officers were justified in their use of deadly force and no charges would be filed against them.

    Investigators also determined that Pierce was a suspect in a recently reopened cold case homicide from 2019.

    According to Fort Collins police, in 2019, officers responded to reports of a man lying unresponsive in his home. The man — later identified as Joseph “Sonny” Brigman — was the victim of homicide.

    Both weapons found with Pierce in the cemetery were later determined to be “ghost guns,” meaning they did not have serial numbers.

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  • Man killed in officer-involved shooting in Silver Spring, police say – WTOP News

    Man killed in officer-involved shooting in Silver Spring, police say – WTOP News

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    A man was killed after an officer shot him in Montgomery County, Maryland, Saturday night.

    A man was killed after an officer shot him in Montgomery County, Maryland, Saturday night.

    Police received a call about an “assault in progress” just before 7:49 p.m. on Janet Road in Silver Spring.

    When the first officer arrived at the scene, they found an adult male armed with an unidentified object and an unknown amount of people standing in the driveway. Montgomery County police spokesperson Shiera Goff said the male suspect allegedly assaulted those people before officers arrived at the scene.

    Goff said the officer gave the man “multiple commands” to drop the object, but he did not comply.

    As the suspect approached the officer and those in the driveway, the officer shot him.

    Officers attempted to provide lifesaving measures to the man as rescue crews arrived.

    The man died at the scene.

    Those who the man assaulted sustained no life-threatening injuries, Goff said.

    Police have not released the man’s identity.

    As a result of the shooting, the officer has been placed on administrative leave pending an investigation, Goff said.

    Per state law, the Maryland Attorney General’s Office Independent Investigations Division will take over the investigation and release the officer’s body-worn video.

    Below is a map of where the shooting took place.

    (Courtesy Google Street View)

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  • Bodycam video released in police shooting of 25-year-old woman in Fort Lee

    Bodycam video released in police shooting of 25-year-old woman in Fort Lee

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    FORT LEE, New Jersey (WABC) — The Attorney General’s Office released body camera footage and audio recordings of two 911 calls relating to the fatal shooting of a 25-year-old woman during an encounter with Fort Lee police officers last month.

    Fort Lee Police Officer Tony Pickens, Jr. shot and killed Victoria G. Lee who was having a mental episode inside her family’s apartment at The Pinnacle complex on Main Street on July 28.

    The fatal police encounter remains under investigation by the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office.

    Investigators previously met with representatives of Lee’s family to review the recordings.

    According to the investigation, on July 28 at approximately 1:25 a.m., police officers from the Fort Lee Police Department responded to The Pinnacle apartment complex, after a man called 911 reporting that his sister was having a mental health crisis and requested she be taken to Valley Hospital in Paramus.

    During the first call, the dispatcher informed the caller that an ambulance and police officer would be sent.

    After the man indicated that “just the ambulance” would be fine, the dispatcher informed the caller that officers had to be sent for mental health calls for the safety of ambulance personnel.

    In a second call to 911, the man initially requested to cancel the call.

    The dispatcher stated that mental health calls could not be canceled and that officers would arrive momentarily.

    The dispatcher asked the caller why he wanted to cancel the call; the man responded that his sister had a knife.

    The dispatcher confirmed that the sister was still in a bedroom in the apartment, informed again that the officers would be there momentarily, and inquired whether his sister was trying to cut anyone with the knife or was just holding it.

    The caller said, “She’s just holding it,” going on to describe that it was a “foldable” knife.

    Her family says her brother had called for an ambulance, because Lee was having a manic episode, and had picked up a small pocketknife. Lee had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder.

    However, the family says she was not being violent and had dropped the knife before officers broke down the apartment door.

    Her family and community members said Lee was not a threat to anyone and are demanding accountability.

    Upon arrival to the apartment, Officer Tony Pickens, Jr. spoke to the caller in the building’s hallway.

    Officer Pickens then opened the apartment door and observed two females: the caller’s sister, identified as “Ms. Lee,” and Ms. Lee’s mother, who was holding a dog.

    They told the officer not to come in and shut the door.

    Officer Pickens stood outside knocking on the door, asking the women to open the door as additional officers arrived.

    After the occupants did not comply, police-worn body camera video captures Officer Pickens speaking through the door, advising that he would have to break the door down.

    Lee is heard on camera saying, “Go ahead, I’ll stab you in the (expletive) neck.”

    After a discussion of which officers would be assigned “lethal” and “less lethal” duties, video shows the officers breaching the door.

    After officers break down the door, footage shows Lee approach the officers in the hallway. Officers shout, “Drop the knife,” and that’s when Officer Pickens fires a single shot, striking Lee in the chest.

    Officers provided immediate medical aid.

    Lee was taken to Englewood Hospital, where she was pronounced dead just before 2 a.m.

    A knife was recovered at the scene.

    Bob Boyce, former NYPD chief of detectives and an ABC News contributor, spoke to Eyewitness News about the incident.

    He says officers had to enter the apartment because someone else was inside with her and could be harmed.

    “Normally barricade we wait, but there’s someone in there. We need to go. Yeah,” Boyce said.

    The Attorney General’s office is investigating whether lethal force was justified.

    In the meantime, advocates say the incident has broken the community’s trust with police.

    “I think everyone is deeply concerned about seeking out help now and I don’t know what will happen in future health emergencies,” Reed said.

    The family had been asking for weeks to see the body camera video. After reviewing the video on Friday, their attorney released a statement on their behalf.

    “Bodycam was released this morning, and they are currently preparing a statement, which will be issued on Monday. The video is devastating, and everything aligns with the family’s statement from last week,” the statement said.

    Lee’s family claims she was not armed and was holding a plastic water jug when she was shot.

    While the family is not ready to speak, community activists say police made no effort to assess or de-escalate the situation after opening the door.

    “I’m absolutely gutted. I see family doing everything they can to protect their loved one that’s well aware of the risks of police violence,” said Amber Reed of AAPI New Jersey.

    “The distance between the police officer who fired and Vitoria, they never seemed close enough even for her to be any kind of threat to him,” Reed said.

    They are now pressing the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office to be thorough with its investigation.

    AAPI New Jersey, Korean American Association of NJ, Korean Community Center, & MinKwon Center for Community Action also released a joint statement following the release of the body camera footage:

    “Victoria Lee should be alive today. The footage and recordings released by the NJ Attorney General’s Office confirm what the Lee family has already shared with the world: that in a matter of minutes, the Fort Lee Police shot and killed Victoria, who was in no way a threat to anyone, as her mother watched helplessly. Words cannot describe our grief or anger. Victoria was killed on July 28th, and yet as of this morning, the Fort Lee community had received no assurance that the officer who killed her is not still patrolling their streets.

    We continue to call on the NJ Attorney General’s Office to fully investigate this incident and follow all evidence. The perpetrator in this incident and all involved must be held accountable.

    Further, we urge a thorough review of the Fort Lee Police Department’s patterns and practices. There are grave concerns raised by this horrific incident that touch the lives of all New Jerseyans. We continue to call for a comprehensive review of all the protocols and practices of the systems that led to this tragic outcome, from the 911 response to the officers’ training in crisis intervention, and beyond in Fort Lee and throughout the state.

    While the investigation is ongoing, our Governor and Legislature must waste no time in doing everything in their power to ensure anyone in need of mental health services can safely access care, including fully implementing the Seabrooks-Washington Act, which would enable community responses to these crises. Communities need more support, not more law enforcement.

    Finally, to our community: we are here to support you and we invite you to be part of the broader efforts to secure justice for all. Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in New Jersey in need of support can contact us to access free short-term care with an AAPI mental health professional in English or Korean. Please reach out to advocacy@aapinewjersey.org for assistance or to get involved.”

    The investigation is ongoing and no further information has been released at this time.

    ———-

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  • Teen with pellet gun fatally shot by police in upstate New York: Body-cam footage released as community calls for accountability

    Teen with pellet gun fatally shot by police in upstate New York: Body-cam footage released as community calls for accountability

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    EDITOR’S NOTE: Video images in this story may be disturbing to some viewers.

    UTICA, N.Y. (WSYR) — Police in Utica, N.Y., have released footage from officers’ uniform-worn cameras which appears to show a teenager pointing an object at them seconds before he was tackled to the ground and fatally shot.

    The boy’s family is now demanding justice.

    Shortly after 10 p.m. EDT on Friday, police in Utica stopped two 13-year-old boys because they matched the description of a pair of suspects wanted for two recent robberies in the West Utica area, according to a department spokesperson. Officers also noted one of the teens was walking in the road, a violation of state traffic law.

    “The suspects were described as Asian males who brandished a black-in-color firearm and forcibly demanded and stole property from victims,” police said, “… one being on foot and the other on a bicycle.”

    Footage from the uniform-worn cameras shows an officer asking if he can search the teenagers for weapons. Nyah Mway is then seen running from officers, who then chase him.

    The footage, some of which is seen in the video player below, then shows Mway apparently pointing an object at the officers.

    “Gun! Gotta gun!” an officer can be heard shouting as they chase Mway.

    Officer Bryce Patterson caught up with Mway, tackled and punched him, and as the two wrestled on the ground, Officer Patrick Husnay opened fire, body-camera video showed.

    Officers called for help and rendered their own first-aid before an ambulance arrived. Utica Police Chief Mark Williams said at a news conference Saturday that the single shot hit the youth in the chest.

    Along with the video, police released photos, seen below, which show the weapon found with Mway’s body. Police have since determined it is a pellet gun with the brand name, “Glock.”

    “We will fully cooperate with the Attorney General’s Office,” Williams said on Saturday morning. “They will ultimately make the decision whether or not the shooting of the individual is justified or not.”

    Three officers involved — Patterson, Andrew Citriniti, and Husnay, who fired the shot — are on paid administrative leave, a policy of the department’s after an officer-involved shooting.

    Under New York law, the attorney general’s office looks into every death at the hands of law enforcement. The Utica Police Department’s probe, meanwhile, will explore whether officers followed policies and training.

    The police chief called the shooting “a tragic and traumatic incident for all involved.”

    Family, community demand accountability

    While the official investigations continues, Mway’s family and outraged community members have demanded accountability for the death of the teen, who was born in Myanmar and was a member of its Karen ethnic minority.

    Utica residents of Karen descent planned to meet Sunday afternoon with Utica Mayor Michael P. Galime, said Daniel Cribb, who works with a Karen community group. A message seeking comment was sent to the mayor’s office.

    At a vigil Saturday night, Mway’s brother, Lah, said through an interpreter that he wouldn’t be satisfied until the officers “are put in jail,” Syracuse.com reported.

    Nyah Mway and his family came to the United States nine years ago, according to speakers at the vigil.

    Others at the vigil questioned officials’ account of the shooting.

    “None of it adds up,” said Kay Klo, one of those at the gathering.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    Andrew Donovan

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  • 1 killed in shooting involving sheriff’s deputies in Rio Linda

    1 killed in shooting involving sheriff’s deputies in Rio Linda

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    A man is dead after being shot by deputies in Sacramento County on Saturday, according to the sheriff’s office. The Sheriff’s office said the shooting happened on the 2500 block of Campanile Street in Rio Linda around 9 a.m. KCRA 3’s Orko Manna is at the scene gathering more information. The sheriff’s office said deputies responded around 8:15 a.m. after a call from a family about a person who was suicidal. According to the sheriff’s office, when deputies arrived, the man was holding a knife and walking toward them. KCRA 3 asked the sheriff’s office spokesperson, Sgt. Amar Gandhi, if the man was charging at the deputies or had intent to harm them. Gandhi said he could not confirm that but he could confirm that the man got within feet of a deputy. The sheriff’s office said rubber bullets were used but not effective. Deputies proceeded to shoot the man several times. The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene. No deputies were injured, the sheriff’s office said. This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.

    A man is dead after being shot by deputies in Sacramento County on Saturday, according to the sheriff’s office.

    The Sheriff’s office said the shooting happened on the 2500 block of Campanile Street in Rio Linda around 9 a.m.

    KCRA 3’s Orko Manna is at the scene gathering more information.

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    The sheriff’s office said deputies responded around 8:15 a.m. after a call from a family about a person who was suicidal.

    According to the sheriff’s office, when deputies arrived, the man was holding a knife and walking toward them.

    KCRA 3 asked the sheriff’s office spokesperson, Sgt. Amar Gandhi, if the man was charging at the deputies or had intent to harm them. Gandhi said he could not confirm that but he could confirm that the man got within feet of a deputy.

    The sheriff’s office said rubber bullets were used but not effective. Deputies proceeded to shoot the man several times. The suspect was pronounced dead at the scene.

    No deputies were injured, the sheriff’s office said.

    This is a developing story. Stay with KCRA 3 for the latest.

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  • Chase, attempted carjackings end in deadly Phoenix police shootout

    Chase, attempted carjackings end in deadly Phoenix police shootout

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    The Phoenix Police Department released body camera and other footage from a Feb. 19 car chase that ended with 37-year-old Miguel Godines being killed by officers in a shootout.

    The video does not show Godines being shot. The officer who shot Godines was in a vehicle, and body camera footage shows the interior of the car door and the officer’s left hand aiming a gun through the open car window.

    The video footage police released on Tuesday is part of the agency’s “critical incident briefing,” which is made public after any police shooting or in-custody death. The briefings are narrated by officers and include edited compilations of body camera footage, dispatch audio and other information regarding an incident.

    According to the briefing, the incident started at 10:45 p.m. around 27th Avenue and Van Buren Street when police saw a brown car exit a business parking lot at high speed. The officers alerted other police in the area, who then attempted unsuccessfully to pull over the car at 34th Avenue and Van Buren. When patrol officers lost sight of the vehicle, police said their helicopter started following it.

    The car traveled to 43rd Avenue and Granada Road, where the driver reportedly got out while armed and ran up to a car yelling at that driver, who drove away.

    According to police, the suspect got back into his car and drove to 60th Lane and McDowell Road, where he allegedly tried to carjack a second vehicle. That person also drove off.

    The suspect then ran up to yet another car. The driver told police the suspect “slammed both hands on the hood of her car holding a gun and demanded she give him her car.” Two officers arrived, and both reportedly saw the suspect pointing his gun at one of the officers.

    “That is when the suspect and one officer exchanged gunfire,” Lt. Vince Lewis said in the briefing video. “The suspect was hit and fell to the ground. The officer was not hurt.”

    Three sources of video are shown in the briefing: body camera footage from the officer who shot Godines showing the interior of the police vehicle from which the officer fired; body camera footage from another officer arriving on the scene that shows the interior of a vehicle then a body lying on the ground; and security camera footage from a nearby house showing the top of a person’s head visible above a wall before gunshots are heard. No other video or audio footage from the apparent chase is included in the video.

    In a media advisory sent on the day of the shooting, police said officers got the gun away from the man, though the briefing released Tuesday says the “gun was recovered near where the suspect was shot.”

    Godines was taken to a hospital where he died from his wounds, according to police. The car Godines was driving had been reported stolen earlier, police said.

    The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office opened a criminal investigation into the shooting, and police are conducting an internal investigation to determine if officers followed department policy.

    Phoenix police fatal encounters in 2024

    The U.S. Department of Justice has been investigating Phoenix police for nearly 30 months regarding patterns in use of force by officers, discriminatory policing and treatment of unsheltered and disabled people. Chief Michael Sullivan was brought in to lead the department in September 2022 as it dealt with the probe.

    The city of Phoenix is publicly pushing back against any independent oversight sought by the U.S. Justice Department. But the recent resignation of the head of Phoenix’s Office of Accountability and Transparency is calling into question the city’s ability to watchdog its own police department.

    In 2023, Phoenix police officers shot and killed 12 people, an increase from 2022. Fatal police encounters in 2024 include:

    • Jan. 5: Officers shot and killed Junior Reyes, 30, after Reyes fired at officers, injuring one. Police said they were attempting to arrest Reyes, who was wanted on a felony warrant.
    • Jan. 11: Officers shot and killed John Michael Lewis Jr., 43, in what started as a welfare check. Police said they tried to contact people in the house through the back door when Lewis produced a handgun. Police shot Lewis, and he was pronounced dead at his house.
    • Jan. 27: Officers shot and killed Guy Vogel Jr., 42, after responding to a call that a store had been robbed and guns taken. Police found Vogel and a woman, who they believed were the suspects. The officers gave verbal commands and fired a nonlethal launcher at Vogel, who fled and then produced a handgun. Police responded by firing at and hitting him. Vogel was taken to a hospital, where he died from injuries.
    • Feb. 19: An officer shot and killed Miguel Godines, 37, after reportedly seeing a car driving at high speed out of a parking lot. After a chase and apparent attempts by Godines to steal other cars, police said Godines pointed a gun at one of them. An officer then shot Godines, who was taken to a hospital and died from his injuries.

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    TJ L’Heureux

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  • Man shot by deputies in Sacramento, roads closed

    Man shot by deputies in Sacramento, roads closed

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    (FOX40.COM) — A shooting that involved a deputy left one person injured, according to the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office.

    At around 8:45 on Tuesday, deputies reported a stretch of Fruitridge Road between 42nd and 44th streets was closed because of the incident.

    Details regarding the shooting have not been revealed, however, officials said that the person is alive.

    Additional information will be provided as it becomes available.

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    Veronica Catlin

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  • Officer fires gun at suspect in Houston’s Second Ward, HPD says

    Officer fires gun at suspect in Houston’s Second Ward, HPD says

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    Friday, March 1, 2024 12:24AM

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    HOUSTON, Texas (KTRK) — Heavy law enforcement presence surrounded a portion of Houston’s Second Ward, where an officer discharged their weapon at a suspect, according to the Houston Police Department.

    Thursday’s scene is unfolding in the 6400 block of Brady Street. Houston police said the incident happened at about 5:10 p.m.

    HPD said the suspect’s condition was not immediately unknown but stated no officers were injured.

    Details regarding what led to the incident were not immediately released.

    ABC13 has a crew headed to the scene and will work on gathering additional information.

    For more updates on this story, follow Shannon Ryan on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

    Copyright © 2024 KTRK-TV. All Rights Reserved.

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  • Phoenix police kill man during shootout on Indian School Road

    Phoenix police kill man during shootout on Indian School Road

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    The Phoenix Police Department has released body camera and other video footage from a Jan. 27 robbery that left 42-year-old Guy Vogel Jr. dead after being shot by officers.

    The video footage police released on Feb. 10 is part of the agency’s “critical incident briefing,” which is made public after any police shooting or in-custody death. The briefings are narrated by officers and include edited compilations of body camera footage, dispatch audio and other information regarding an incident.

    According to the briefing, the shooting happened at 22nd Avenue and Indian School Road. Police were dispatched after a pawnshop owner reported that two people — a man and a woman — stole two guns from his store, according to an audio recording.

    Video footage from inside the store also is part of the police briefing. It showed a man smashing a glass display and taking two guns from it before walking out.

    When officers arrived, the store owner directed them to the couple from the robbery as they walked west along 19th Avenue, according to the briefing. Body cam footage from officers showed an officer telling Vogel to “drop the fucking gun” and firing a nonlethal foam launcher. The officer fired “in the direction of” Vogel, according to the police briefing.

    As police pursued Vogel, two officers told him to “drop the fucking gun now” and “get on your stomach.” A man off camera is heard yelling at officers, “Fucking kill me” and “kill me, pussies.”

    Sgt. Brian Bower said in the briefing that Vogel then “approached a truck stopped in the roadway and began to hit the truck’s window with a gun, attempting to get in.” Footage of Vogel hitting the truck’s window with a gun isn’t visible from body camera clips shown in the video.

    Body cam footage from two officers, however, showed that officers fired on Vogel when he pointed a gun toward them. Four officers shot at Vogel, who was then taken to a hospital and died from his injuries.

    In the briefing video, Bower said police recovered the gun Vogel used.

    Sgt. Phil Krynsky, an agency spokesperson, did not respond to question from Phoenix New Times about whether the gun recovered had been reloaded or if the gun shown by police in the video is one of the stolen weapons. New Times also requested the incident report, but it has not been released by police.

    Police said the woman who participated in the robbery, 25-year-old Felicia Evans, was arrested. She is charged with four felonies — three armed robbery charges and one count of possession of a weapon by a prohibited person.

    The Maricopa County Attorney’s Office opened a criminal investigation into the shooting, and police are conducting an internal investigation to determine if officers followed department policy.

    Phoenix police fatal encounters in 2024

    The U.S. Department of Justice has been investigating Phoenix police for nearly 30 months regarding patterns in use of force by officers, discriminatory policing and treatment of unsheltered and disabled people. Chief Michael Sullivan was brought in to lead the department in September 2022 as it dealt with the probe.

    The city of Phoenix is publicly pushing back against any independent oversight sought by the U.S. Justice Department. But the recent resignation of the head of Phoenix’s Office of Accountability and Transparency is shedding light on the weakness of the city’s ability to watchdog its own police department.

    In 2023, Phoenix police officers shot and killed 12 people, an increase from 2022. Fatal police encounters in 2024 include:

    • Jan. 5: Officers shot and killed Junior Reyes, 30, after Reyes fired at officers, injuring one. Police said they were attempting to arrest Reyes, who was wanted on a felony warrant.
    • Jan. 11: Officers shot and killed John Michael Lewis Jr., 43, in what started as a welfare check. Police said they tried to contact people in the house through the back door when Lewis produced a handgun. Police shot Lewis, and he was pronounced dead at his house.
    • Jan. 27: Officers shot and killed Guy Vogel Jr., 42, after responding to a call that a store was robbed and guns were taken. Police found Vogel and a woman, who they believed were the suspects. The officers gave verbal commands and fired a nonlethal launcher at Vogel, who fled and then produced a handgun. Police responded by firing at and hitting him. Vogel was taken to a hospital, where he died from injuries.

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    TJ L’Heureux

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  • UPDATED: Dead subject identified, officers placed on leave after fatal officer-involved shooting early Sunday in Davenport

    UPDATED: Dead subject identified, officers placed on leave after fatal officer-involved shooting early Sunday in Davenport

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    The Iowa Department of Public Safety’s (DPS) Division of Criminal Investigations (DCI) investigated a fatal officer-involved shooting early Sunday in Davenport and identified the individual involved as 24-year-old Davenport resident Kenneth Jamel Carrol Jr.






    Davenport Police investigate a shooting incident early Sunday in the 3100 block of East Kimberly Road. 



    Thomas Geyer



    Three Davenport Police officers, two Iowa State Troopers and one Bettendorf Police officer discharged their weapons during the encounter with Carrol, and all six officers have been placed on Critical Incident Leave while the case is being investigated, according to a DPS news release.

    An autopsy of Carrol will take place at the Office of the Iowa State Medical Examiner. No law enforcement personnel were injured. The release states: “Per protocol, their [law enforcement personnel] names will not be released prior to being interviewed by the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation.”

    According to an earlier DPS news release, at 2:50 a.m. on Sunday, Oct. 30, 2022, multiple agencies were patrolling in the area of 5200 Grand Avenue when officers initiated a traffic stop and the driver failed to stop, which resulted in a pursuit.

    People are also reading…

    The pursuit ended after the vehicle became inoperable near Kimberly Road and Elmore Avenue — occupants then fled on foot. Officers exchanged gunfire with Carrol during the foot pursuit; as a result, Carrol was pronounced dead at the scene, according to the release.

    According to Scott County District Court and Iowa Department of Corrections electronic records, Carrol was discharged from probation on Oct. 2 for being a felon in possession of a firearm. At the time he was arrested for the gun charge he was on probation for convictions of theft, forgery and using a juvenile for an indictable offense.

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  • ‘I wasn’t going with him’: Upstate veteran recalls frightening involvement in officer involved shooting

    ‘I wasn’t going with him’: Upstate veteran recalls frightening involvement in officer involved shooting

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    An Upstate veteran recalls his frightening involvement in an officer-involved shooting in Pickens Co. Wednesday night.It started as a normal evening for Isaiah McKinney. “I was on my way home from work coming from 123 and I turned onto kay drive. When I got to a little before the railroad tracks,” McKinney said.He saw police lights and thought it was a checkpoint of some kind, but then he noticed something else “This guy was flagging me down and for a split second, I thought he was a cop. I didn’t know if he was with the police. I didn’t know if he needed help. I didn’t know what was going on. So I slow down,” McKinney said.The decision to slow down led to one of the scariest moments of McKinney’s life. “He approaches my vehicle with a gaze of all ‘hey man I was wondering if you can give me a ride’ and then I see the gun,” McKinney said. “He enters the driver-side back seat door and immediately gets in.”The Pickens County coroner would eventually identify this person to be Thomas Christopher Wheeler.When Wheeler got in the car, McKinney said a gun was pointed at him. “And then he says put it in reverse and drive. Put it in reverse and drive or I’ll shoot you,” McKinney said.Mckinney said after that it was a blur. “It was at that point my children’s faces flashed before my eyes and I knew I wasn’t going with him and so I got out,” McKinney said. “I wasn’t gonna let him take me as a hostage. You can shoot me in the back because I’m running but I’m not coming with you.”While he was worried about his own life, there was something else at the front of his mind. “My fiancé finding out that I was shot in a carjacking. That terrified me. I didn’t want her to lose me. I didn’t want her to have to find out that I was killed in a violent crime,” McKinney said. Not long after McKinney left the car, police said wheeler pulled a gun on police. Police shot and killed him.McKinney knows what he is going to say when he sees his boys when he sees them. “Daddy loves you. I love you guys so much. My boys,” McKinney said. McKinney added he was still a little bit shaken up but happy to be alive.He also thanked law enforcement for how they handled the situation.

    An Upstate veteran recalls his frightening involvement in an officer-involved shooting in Pickens Co. Wednesday night.

    It started as a normal evening for Isaiah McKinney.

    “I was on my way home from work coming from 123 and I turned onto kay drive. When I got to a little before the railroad tracks,” McKinney said.

    He saw police lights and thought it was a checkpoint of some kind, but then he noticed something else

    “This guy was flagging me down and for a split second, I thought he was a cop. I didn’t know if he was with the police. I didn’t know if he needed help. I didn’t know what was going on. So I slow down,” McKinney said.

    The decision to slow down led to one of the scariest moments of McKinney’s life.

    “He approaches my vehicle with a gaze of all ‘hey man I was wondering if you can give me a ride’ and then I see the gun,” McKinney said. “He enters the driver-side back seat door and immediately gets in.”

    The Pickens County coroner would eventually identify this person to be Thomas Christopher Wheeler.

    When Wheeler got in the car, McKinney said a gun was pointed at him.

    “And then he says put it in reverse and drive. Put it in reverse and drive or I’ll [expletive] shoot you,” McKinney said.

    Mckinney said after that it was a blur.

    “It was at that point my children’s faces flashed before my eyes and I knew I wasn’t going with him and so I got out,” McKinney said. “I wasn’t gonna let him take me as a hostage. You can shoot me in the back because I’m running but I’m not coming with you.”

    While he was worried about his own life, there was something else at the front of his mind.

    “My fiancé finding out that I was shot in a carjacking. That terrified me. I didn’t want her to lose me. I didn’t want her to have to find out that I was killed in a violent crime,” McKinney said.

    Not long after McKinney left the car, police said wheeler pulled a gun on police. Police shot and killed him.

    McKinney knows what he is going to say when he sees his boys when he sees them.

    “Daddy loves you. I love you guys so much. My boys,” McKinney said.

    McKinney added he was still a little bit shaken up but happy to be alive.

    He also thanked law enforcement for how they handled the situation.

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