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Inglewood Chief Calls Police Slaying "Tragic"
Thomas Watkins, Associated Press
May 15, 2008, 6:24 AM PDT
INGLEWOOD -- The police chief Wednesday called the
fatal shooting of an unarmed man "highly tragic" but said the
officers who shot him may have been within policy.
Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks said department policy
prohibits officers from shooting at moving cars, unless they
believe their lives to be in immediate jeopardy.
"In this case, we have that," Seabrooks told a news conference
in the Los Angeles suburb.
Still, she cautioned the investigation into what happened had
not yet been completed.
"Please do keep in mind, that we have not conducted fully the
administrative investigation to determine if in fact there are any
policy violations or not," she said.
Michael Byoune, 19, died early Sunday after two officers fired
into a car in which he was riding.
According to police, two officers on patrol together heard
gunfire coming from a parking lot by a hamburger stand. As they
approached the scene, they saw a man running, then get into the
back of a slowly moving car.
As the officers pulled into the parking lot, the car was driving
toward them and they believed gunfire was coming from the vehicle,
Seabrooks said.
Officer Brian Ragan, who was driving, fired four rounds through
his own windshield. He then got out the squad car and continued
firing from behind a nearby wall. Ragan has been on the force more
than five years.
Ragan's patrol partner, Roman Fernandez, a rookie officer with
less than a year on the force, also fired several rounds, Seabrooks
said, without specifying where Fernandez was when he fired his
weapon.
Byoune was killed. The driver, Larry White, was shot in the leg.
Police said a second passenger, Christopher Larkins, the man who
had jumped into the car, was unhurt, but his attorney said a bullet
grazed him close to an eye.
Both officers are on paid administrative leave. The Police
Department is conducting two probes into the shooting and the Los
Angeles County district attorney's office also is investigating.
Police played a recording of radio talk around the time of the
shooting. An unidentified officer can be heard saying shots have
been fired and he saw someone running. He sounds increasingly
agitated as the recording continues, saying at one point, "Shots
fired, 1199," using the police code for an officer needing help.
The officers were driving a police car that did not have lights
on its roof, and initial accounts show no patrol lights were
flashing as the officers pulled into the parking lot. Officials
also said the officers apparently did not verbally identify
themselves before shooting.
Attorney Carl Douglas, who represents Byoune's family and the
two other men who were in the car, said the shooting reflected a
breakdown in police training and that his understanding of events
was not the same as the police account.
"I have a version of the facts that differs somewhat from the
version you have just heard," Douglas said without elaborating.
Byoune's half brother Steven Bertrand, 33, said the family was
struggling to accept the official account.
"I can find a lot of problems with what they said," Bertrand
said. "It doesn't make any sense, they know they were wrong."
Bertrand described Byoune as a quiet but playful man. He said
the burger stand where the shooting took place is a popular
nighttime meeting spot for Inglewood teens.
"He was cool to get along with, he had a lot of friends,"
Bertrand said.
He said the family is trying to raise money for a funeral.
Byoune's cousin John Benoit, 29, said Byoune was a "big teddy
bear" who wanted to be a musician and a chef.
The police chief has previously described the men's car as
coming at the officers, but the executive director of the nonprofit
Police Assessment Resource Center, Merrick Bobb, said he was
puzzled why no one had been charged with a crime if the car was
threatening.
"I have questions about why the DA did not press charges
against the others involved in the incident if indeed the car was
posing a danger of imminent death or injury to the officers," Bobb
said. "In my view there is a high burden to justify all the risks
and why they felt justified to shoot at the vehicle."
Shooting from or at a moving car has in recent years been the
subject of considerable discussion among police departments, Bobb
said.
Several departments have amended their policies so car shootings
are a "disfavored tactic," as killing or wounding a driver often
causes a car to keep moving without control instead of stopping.
"It's not a particularly smart thing to do," Bobb said. "It's
not a particularly effective means of stopping a vehicle."
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