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Tag: Police Shootings

  • Colorado State Patrol trooper injured in shooting; suspect killed

    Colorado State Patrol trooper injured in shooting; suspect killed

    A Colorado State Patrol trooper was injured Saturday afternoon after he was shot while in his patrol vehicle in Westminster, according to the agency.

    The trooper shot the suspect, who died at the scene, according to the news release. The suspect has not yet been publicly identified.

    The shooting occurred at about 1:18 p.m. The trooper was parked in the center median on U.S. 36, west of Federal Blvd., when a car drove by and shot several rounds at him. One bullet hit the trooper, according to the news release.

    The driver of the car then pulled over on a shoulder and the suspect exited and began firing again at the windshield of the patrol vehicle. The trooper then exited his car and fired back at the shooter, according to the news release.

    The trooper was transported to a local hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, according to the release.

    U.S. 36 is closed while police conduct their investigation, according to the news release.

    Originally Published:

    Jessica Seaman

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  • Man killed by Fort Collins police in cemetery shooting suspected in cold-case homicide

    Man killed by Fort Collins police in cemetery shooting suspected in cold-case homicide

    A 42-year-old man fatally shot by Fort Collins police during an armed confrontation at Grandview Cemetery in July was a suspect in a 2019 cold-case homicide, police officials said Friday.

    Clayton Pierce was shot by Fort Collins police on July 21 after he crashed his vehicle near City Park and fled the scene armed with an “AR-style” rifle and handgun, according to a decision letter published by the 8th Judicial District Attorney’s Office on Friday.

    Pierce was involved in a single-vehicle rollover crash and left the scene armed with two “ghost guns,” or guns without serial numbers, which are illegal to own, sell or create.

    Pierce was also carrying a bottle of bourbon with the words “His last day” written on it, according to the district attorney’s letter.

    He pointed the rifle at responding police officers and shot one officer in the arm, according to the agency. He then walked into Grandview Cemetery, where he was fatally shot by police.

    Pierce had twice the legal driving limit of alcohol as well as methamphetamine, THC and gabapentin in his system at the time of his death, according to the letter.

    Katie Langford

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  • Thornton officers shoot man allegedly armed, resisting arrest

    Thornton officers shoot man allegedly armed, resisting arrest

    Thornton police officers shot and injured an armed man allegedly resisting arrest Tuesday night.

    Around 8 p.m. Tuesday, Thornton officers approached a man with a warrant in a parking lot in the 200 block of East 120th Avenue — just west of Interstate 25 near Webster Lake — according to a news release from the police department.

    Officers told the man he was under arrest, but he refused to listen to officers and attempted to walk away, the news release stated.

    The police department said officers fired a taser at the man, but it was “ineffective.” When the man allegedly pulled out a handgun in response, multiple officers shot him.

    Paramedics transported the man to a hospital with “serious injuries,” police said in the release. An update on his condition was not available Wednesday morning.

    Lauren Penington

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  • Extended Interview: Sonya Massey’s son and mother say she’d still be alive if she wasn’t Black

    Extended Interview: Sonya Massey’s son and mother say she’d still be alive if she wasn’t Black

    Extended Interview: Sonya Massey’s son and mother say she’d still be alive if she wasn’t Black – CBS News


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    In this extended interview, Sonya Massey’s mother, Donna, and son, Malachi, speak out about the fatal police shooting of the 36-year-old inside her home in Springfield, Illinois, saying they believe the sheriff’s deputy wouldn’t have done it at all if she hadn’t been Black. Former Sangamon County Sheriff’s Deputy Sean Grayson has pleaded not guilty to charges of first-degree murder, aggravated battery with a firearm and official misconduct. CBS News’ Roxana Saberi reports.

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  • Family of teen killed by US Park Police presses for answers on the anniversary of his death – WTOP News

    Family of teen killed by US Park Police presses for answers on the anniversary of his death – WTOP News

    One year after Dalaneo Martin was killed by U.S. Park Police, his family called on the Justice Department for answers in the investigation into his death.

    Attorney Ben Crump speaks at a news conference outside the Department of Justice on the one-year anniversary of Dalaneo Martin’s death. (WTOP/Kate Ryan)

    One year after 17-year-old Dalaneo Martin was shot and killed by U.S. Park Police, his family and their attorneys called on the Department of Justice for answers in the investigation into the D.C. teen’s death.

    On the morning of March 18, 2023, Martin was found sleeping in a stolen car in a Northeast D.C. neighborhood when D.C. police and members of the U.S. Park Police arrived on the scene. Body camera video from D.C. police showed the officers formulating a plan to get Martin out of the stolen car.

    The video showed a D.C. police officer directing the group not to get into the vehicle. The same video showed a U.S. Park Police officer getting into the back seat of the car, and Martin driving off. At that point, the officer fired his service weapon, hitting Martin multiple times.

    Outside the Department of Justice building on the anniversary of Martin’s death, family members and attorneys chanted “Justice for Debo,” using the teenager’s nickname.

    His mother Terra Martin took a deep breath before telling reporters that by the time she arrived to the scene of the shooting, a white sheet was draped over her son’s body.

    “Six shots to the back. How can you justify that?” she asked.

    Attorneys Andrew Clarke, Ben Crump and Billy Murphy were joined by Judge Greg Mathis, who complained about the lack of information on the ongoing civil rights investigation opened by the Department of Justice in April 2023.

    “What are you hiding?” Mathis asked.

    “This is a tragedy of the police’s own making,” Murphy said, expressing frustration as he referenced the high-profile cases of Freddie Gray, George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

    “Day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, we see the same kinds of unnecessary deaths at the hands of the police,” Murphy said.

    The attorneys said that until today, they had not heard from the Department of Justice since April, when its investigation into Martin’s death began. But Crump said they have been told that they will get a briefing sometime this week.

    Nee Nee Taylor, with the organization Harriet’s Wildest Dreams, also spoke at the news conference.

    Taylor told the group, which included Martin’s nine brothers and sisters and one of his two sons, “We are calling for transformation and accountability of policing in our society so that it no longer serves as an agent of anti-Blackness.”

    Taylor added, “We’re going to show you better than we can tell you that we’re going to get justice for Debo,”

    Crump was asked what justice would look like for Martin’s family.

    “Criminal charges, certainly,” he said, adding that civil action, including seeking compensation, is something the legal team is working on. Crump said the goal of a civil case would be to produce changes that prevent deaths like Martin’s.

    “That could be the legacy of Debo. Not just justice for Debo, but justice for us all,” he said.

    Attorney Clarke echoed that sentiment, saying policy changes and approaches in policing to avoid escalation are critically needed.

    “That’s what justice looks like, because had that officer taken that same care with Debo that same day, none of us would be here,” Clarke said.

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    Kate Ryan

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  • Suspect shot by Denver police after stabbing at 7-Eleven

    Suspect shot by Denver police after stabbing at 7-Eleven

    A person was shot by Denver police after allegedly stabbing a clerk at a 7-Eleven near West Fifth Avenue and North Federal Boulevard on Friday night.

    Officers responded to reports of a 7-Eleven store clerk who had been stabbed and found a suspect near West Fifth Avenue and North Federal Boulevard at approximately 6:49 p.m., police spokesperson Kurt Barnes said Friday.

    Katie Langford

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  • Santa Clara police fire on knife-wielding man during Saturday morning arrest

    Santa Clara police fire on knife-wielding man during Saturday morning arrest

    PIX Now Evening Edition 2-17-24


    PIX Now Evening Edition 2-17-24

    14:59

    SANTA CLARA — A Santa Clara police officer fired on a man wanted for assaulting a family member when he refused to drop knives Saturday morning, police said.

    The suspect, 20-year-old Anthony Hernandez, was not struck and was ultimately taken into custody after a brief struggle, police said.

    Officers responded about 11 a.m. to a report of a domestic disturbance near the 1000 block of Kiely Boulevard. They learned the suspect had left after arming himself with several knives.

    Hernandez was found nearby and didn’t comply with orders to drop the weapons, police said.

    Officers were unsuccessful in taking the man into custody using a less-lethal device and a gunshot was fired at the suspect, police said.

    He was captured after a struggle and taken to a local hospital for treatment of minor injuries, police said.

    The investigation is preliminary and the motive was not immediately known.

    Witnesses or anyone with information are asked to contact Detective Hagg at (408) 615-4814 or fhagg@santaclaraca.gov.

    CBS San Francisco

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  • Officer who fatally shot homeowner who called 911 seconds after arriving at scene charged with manslaughter

    Officer who fatally shot homeowner who called 911 seconds after arriving at scene charged with manslaughter

    NJ grand jury indicts Mantua Township officer in connection to fatal shooting


    NJ grand jury indicts Mantua Township officer in connection to fatal shooting

    00:39

    A police officer who fatally shot a homeowner who had called 911 to report intruders outside his southern New Jersey home has been indicted on a manslaughter charge.

    The count against Mantua Township Police Officer Salvatore Oldrati was handed up Tuesday by a state grand jury and was made public Wednesday night. He faces up to 10 years in prison if convicted.

    The charge stems from the Sept. 14, 2021, death of Charles Sharp III, 49, who called 911 around 1:30 a.m. to report he had spotted two burglars in his backyard and that one of them had a handgun. Oldrati and another Mantua officer, Cpl. Robert Layton, soon responded to the home in different vehicles.

    Sharp, an Air Force veteran, had remained on the phone with the 911 dispatcher and was standing in his front yard when the officers arrived. Layton got there first, with Oldrati arriving a short time later.

    As Oldrati got out of his police vehicle, Layton yelled, “He’s got a handgun on him, right there,” the attorney general’s office said in a press release. Oldrati then fired his service weapon multiple times, hitting Sharp several times. Sharp was taken to a hospital but was pronounced dead there a short time later.

    Layton did not discharge his service weapon, authorities said, and neither he nor Oldrati were injured. A replica .45-caliber firearm was recovered near Sharp, authorities said.

    Investigators determined that Oldrati gave no verbal commands or warnings before shooting Sharp.

    23vo-mantua-officer-indicted-transfer-frame-0.jpg
    Scene on Sept. 14, 2021 after Mantua Township Police Officer Salvatore Oldrati shot homeowner Charles Sharp III to death after responding to a call placed to 911 by Sharp.

    CBS Philadelphia


    “When residents call 911 for service, they are concerned, they need assistance, they seek protection – and they trust the officers responding to their calls will respond accordingly and help them,” state Attorney General Matthew Platkin said in a statement. “Tragically, that did not happen here.”

    The case was reviewed by the grand jury, which is mandated in cases where a civilian dies during an encounter with a law enforcement officer. The Office of Public Integrity and Accountability investigated the incident and presented its findings to the panel.

    “Less than five seconds elapsed between when Officer Oldrati stepped out of his police vehicle and when he began firing at Mr. Sharp,” Thomas Eicher, the office’s executive director, said in the statement. ” … The grand jury determined that his conduct was not justified and warranted the return of an indictment for manslaughter.”

    Oldrati’s attorney, Christopher St. John, said he was surprised and disappointed by the indictment, and his client was “extremely disappointed.”

    “However, I’m very confident that once an actual jury, a petit jury, is able to view all of the evidence in its entirety, that Sal will be exonerated,” St. John said.

    Sharp’s obituary said he served in the Air Force for more than 21 years and “was a talented carpenter with many skills” who “could build anything.”

    “Chuck was a funny guy and always knew how to make you laugh and could always put a smile on your face,” the obituary said.

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