Two L.A. policemen who shot unarmed black
man sue city for racial discrimination: media
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[August 04, 2016]
(Reuters) - Two Los Angeles police
officers who shot dead an unarmed black man in 2014 are suing the city
for alleged racial discrimination and retaliation after not being
allowed to return to the field, the Los Angeles Times reported.
Officers Sharlton Wampler and Antonio Villegas killed Ezell Ford, 25,
during a confrontation. They have not yet been charged, according to the
Times. Ford was described by family attorneys as mentally challenged.
In a lawsuit filed in Los Angeles County Superior Court on Wednesday,
the officers accused supervisors of denying their requests to return to
the field based on their race and the race of Ezell Ford, the paper
reported.
Villegas is Latino and Wampler is said to be Caucasian in the suit, but
department records have him listed him as Asian American, the Los
Angeles Times reported.
The lawsuit also says that the officers have been denied transfers,
overtime and promotions because of their race, and that they have faced
retaliation after they filed complaints over racial discrimination with
state regulators in 2015, the paper said.
A spokesman for the L.A. city attorney's office told the Times they were
reviewing the lawsuit but could not comment further.
City officials were not immediately available for comment.
Ford's death came two days after police shot dead another unarmed black
teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, triggering protests, some violent,
across the country over the excessive use of force by police.
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A man stands near a mural for Ezell Ford after the Los Angeles
County Coroner released an autopsy report on the LAPD's shooting of
Ford in Los Angeles, California December 29, 2014. REUTERS/Jonathan
Alcorn
Since then the debate over policing and racism has intensified in
the United States where a string of fatal shootings of black men and
women by officers, as well as other racially motivated killings,
have fueled anger and given rise to the Black Lives Matter protest
movement.
In July, high-profile police shootings of two black men in Minnesota
and Louisiana were followed by an African-American former U.S.
soldier killing five policemen in Dallas in retaliation.
(Reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Editing by Raissa
Kasolowsky)
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