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THE GLOBAL WORLD

THE GLOBAL WORLD

THE GLOBAL WORLD

THE GLOBAL WORLD

Thursday, September 1, 2022

Body camera video shows a Columbus, Ohio, police officer fatally shooting an unarmed 20-year-old Black man




From the Website of CNN NEWS
links 
https://edition.cnn.com/2022/09/01/us/columbus-ohio-police-shooting-donovan-lewis/index.html


Body camera video shows a Columbus, Ohio, police officer fatally shooting an unarmed 20-year-old Black man


(CNN)Police in Columbus, Ohio, have released body camera video that shows a police officer fatally shooting an unarmed Black man in his bed.

Donovan Lewis, 20, died Tuesday after being shot by Columbus Police Officer Ricky Anderson, a 30-year veteran with the Columbus Division of Police assigned to the K9 Unit, according to a police statement.

Rex Elliott, an attorney for Lewis' family, said at a news conference Thursday morning that there was no justification for the officer to discharge his weapon.

"Donovan was unarmed, and he was abiding by police commands to come out of his room when he was shot in cold blood by Officer Anderson," he said, with Lewis' mother, father, siblings, grandmother aunt and family friends gathered around him. They were not ready to offer comments or answer questions, the attorney said, but they were "just a few of the many people that have had their lives altered forever because of the events of early Tuesday morning."

The shooting is under investigation by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation, and Anderson is currently on leave, Columbus Police Chief Elaine Bryant said at a news conference Tuesday.

The shooting happened around 2 a.m. Tuesday at an apartment building where uniformed officers were serving a felony warrant for domestic violence and assault and improper handling of a firearm, Bryant said at the news conference. A news release by police indicated the male who was shot, later identified as Lewis, as the person sought in the felony warrant.



A screengrab from body cam footage shows Columbus Police Officer Ricky Anderson and K9 moments before shooting and killing 20-year-old Donovan Lewis.

"The officers knocked on the door for several minutes ... acknowledging themselves as Columbus Police officers," Bryant said. Two men were taken

Police body camera video shows them knocking and calling out to occupants repeatedly for more than eight minutes. They called for "Donovan" by name several times.

Eventually, a man came to the door and was taken into custody by police, Bryant said. He told officers he'd been asleep, and they took a knife from his pocket. A second man inside the apartment was taken into custody about a minute later.

Officers asked if anyone else was inside the apartment, Bryant said, but were unable to determine that, and Anderson and a K9 were then called in by Columbus Police to see if anyone else was inside.

"Once the K9 officer arrived on the scene, additional announcements were made for anyone else inside to come out or the K9 was going to be released inside of the apartment," Bryant said.

In the police body camera video, the K9 is seen barking outside a back bedroom door, then officers enter the apartment and warn they are going to send a dog in.

An officer is seen opening the bedroom door, where a man is seen on a bed.

Bodycam video shows Anderson firing a single shot at a man, later identified as Lewis, moments after opening the bedroom door.

During the news conference, Bryant showed the body camera video frame-by-frame, asserting that the moment Anderson opened fire, it appeared Lewis was holding "something" in his hand.

A vape pen was later found next to Lewis on the bed, Bryant says. Once Lewis was handcuffed, video shows, officers began rendering aid.

Lewis was taken to a nearby hospital, where he was pronounced dead at 3:19 a.m., according to the

 Columbus Police statement.

Lewis' death follows a string of other police shootings

Attorneys for the officer expressed sympathy for Lewis' family in a statement Thursday, but said police officers "are forced to make split-second decisions in response to the actions of others."

"When we analyze police involved shootings, we must look to the totality of the circumstances and we are expressly forbidden from using 20/20 hindsight, because unlike all of us, officers are not afforded the luxury of armchair reflection when they are faced with rapidly evolving, volatile encounters in dangerous situations," the statement by attorneys Mark Collins and Kaitlin Stephens said. "Because of this, the law allows a reasonable officer to be mistaken, just as the law allows us as non-police officers to be mistaken."

"We are sure the investigation will be thorough," they said, "and we certainly hope the process of any future legal proceedings will be more fair than what we have seen in the recent past."

Bryant, the police chief, said Tuesday officers are "put in compromising, potentially life-threatening situations" every day, "in which we are required to make split-second decisions."

"As the chief, it is my job to hold my officers accountable, but it's also my job to offer them support and make sure that I give that to them through the process," Bryant said. "If they do the right things for the right reasons, we will support them. If they do something wrong, they will be held accountable."



Columbus Mayor Andrew Ginther, left, and Columbus Police Chief Elaine Bryant speak to reporters about the shooting of Donovan Lewis.

But Elliott, the family's attorney, called Lewis' death "utterly senseless" at Thursday's news conference, saying "excessive deadly force was recklessly used by officer Anderson when he shot and killed an unarmed Black man."

"How many more lives are going to be lost to this type of reckless activity? How many more young Black lives will be lost? How many more families like Donovan's will need to appear in news
 conferences like this one," Elliott asked, "before our leaders do enough to put a stop to these barbaric killings?"

The incident is just the latest in a string of deadly and controversial law enforcement shootings

 involving the city's Black residents in recent years that have prompted protests over racial injustice and a review by the US Department of Justice into the Columbus Division of Police.

A Franklin County Sheriff's Office deputy fatally shot Casey Goodson Jr. in December 2020 as the 23-year-old tried to enter his home with a Subway sandwich. The deputy was working for the US Marshals Service Fugitive Task Force looking for violent offenders at the time, police said, but Goodson was not the individual being sought. A grand jury indicted the deputy on two counts of murder and one count of reckless homicide.

Later that month, a Columbus police officer fatally shot Andre Hill as officers responded to a report of a man who was sitting in his SUV for an extended period. The officer in that case was fired and charged with murder, and the city council later voted to approve a $10 million settlement to Hill's family, the largest in the city's history.

Ma'Khia Bryant, 16, was killed in another shooting last April when Columbus police responded to her foster home, where Ma'Khia had been arguing with another young woman over a messy home and unmade bed. Police body camera video showed Ma'Khia lunge at the other woman with a knife, and a grand jury later declined to indict the officer who fired the fatal shot.

Lewis' family has appreciated the support it has receive from the community so far, Elliott said, and they asked that any gatherings or protests remain "peaceful and supportive and constructive."
"Reality is, if we don't gather, and we don't indicate how upsetting this is to all of us, we're never going to see change," the attorney said.




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