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Video is released of 1st fatal NYPD shooting since bodycams

NEW YORK — Police released bodycam footage Thursday showing the tense buildup to the fatal shooting of a man holding a knife and what turned out to be a fake gun, though the cameras don’t include a clear picture of the moment when officers opened fire.

September 14, 2017  By The Associated Press


It was the first fatal police encounter recorded on the devices since officers began wearing them this year.

Police were called to the Bronx home of 31-year-old Miguel Richards on Sept. 6 after his landlord reported he hadn’t seen him for a few days.
The videos, shot by cameras worn by four officers, show how police pleaded with Richards to drop his weapons and show his hands.

Officer Mark Flemming shines a flashlight into Richards’ bedroom as the information technology student, wearing dark glasses and holding a knife, stands motionless behind his bed. He never speaks.

“Put your hand up, dude, and drop the knife,” Flemming says calmly. “I don’t want to shoot you. Put your hand up and drop that knife.”

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A friend called to the apartment by the landlord frantically begs Richards to drop the knife and put his hands up.

About 15 minutes in, the officers notice Richards has a gun behind his back.

“Drop that gun, dude. Drop that gun,” Flemming says. “Is that a real gun you’ve got there? Ricardo, I don’t want to shoot you if you’ve got a fake gun in your hand. You hear me? But I will shoot you if that’s a real gun.”

A third officer, Jesus Ramos, appears with a stun gun while Richards stands behind his bed.

What happens next is partly obscured by the officers’ arms and the walls. There is a loud bang, followed by 16 shots.

Police said Richards pointed a fake gun with a laser pointer at the officers, who fired both the stun gun and their weapons. A red dot from a laser pointer can be seen, but it isn’t clear whether that comes from the toy or the sight on the stun gun. Officers appear to recoil just before firing.

Chief of Department Carlos Gomez said officers asked Richards 50 times to drop the weapons.

“That’s a lot of warnings by both uniformed officers and a friend at the scene,” Gomez said.

Richards’ father has said he believed officers killed his son in cold blood.

“He did not deserve to die this way,” he told the Daily News of New York.

The footage was released publicly over the objection of Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark, who said she supported the need for transparency but still had an obligation to her investigation into whether the officers involved should face criminal charges.

In a note to officers, Police Commissioner James O’Neill said the department was releasing the footage because it was committed to being as transparent as possible.

He said, “In the vast majority of these cases, we believe that body-worn camera video will confirm the tremendous restraint exhibited by our officers.”

The four officers at the scene included Flemming, who fired nine times, and Redmond Murphy, who fired seven times. Ramos later showed up with Officer Marco Oliveras.

Police Commissioner James O’Neill sent a note to officers explaining the rationale for releasing the video.

“We are doing this because the NYPD is committed to being as transparent as possible with respect to the release of body-worn camera video in these critical incidents,” he said.

Officers at the nation’s largest department began using body-worn cameras in April as part of a federal judge’s order following a ruling that the department discriminated against minorities with its stop-and-frisk policy.

Mayor Bill de Blasio has said he wants all 23,000 of its patrol officers outfitted with cameras by 2019. So far, 670 officers have them.
There are no set rules on when to release footage.

The NYPD has said it would evaluate each instance on a case-by-case basis. That includes decisions about how much footage to release, whether to edit excerpts or whether to make it public at all.

In some cities, the decision is made by mayors or prosecutors. In San Diego, the district attorney has said videos would not be released until her office has completed a review and only sections relevant to the investigation would be released. In Washington, D.C., the mayor’s office decides with input from police and prosecutors.

In Chicago, footage must be released within 60 days. City Hall had fought the release of video showing a white officer shooting black teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times in October 2014. A judge had to compel the city to make it public, and the images set off mass protests.

Chuck Wexler, executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, which wrote guidelines on body-worn cameras for the Justice Department, said he recommended a broad release policy and suggested that departments that don’t want to release video not buy the cameras.

“The public expectation — they want it now — is vastly different from that of prosecutors or those who focus on the administrative aspect of this,” he said. “And the public’s right to know is winning out.”

– Colleen Long

News from © Canadian Press Enterprises Inc. 2017


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