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		Washington state will not charge police 
		in Mexican laborer's slaying 
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		 [September 09, 2016] 
		By Eric M. Johnson 
 SEATTLE (Reuters) - The U.S. state of 
		Washington has decided not to file criminal charges against the three 
		police officers who fatally shot an undocumented Mexican farm worker in 
		2015 after he threw rocks at them and ran through a crowded 
		intersection.
 
 The killing of Antonio Zambrano-Montes in the southeastern farming hub 
		of Pasco, captured on video by witnesses and shared widely online, 
		sparked days of protests from the city's majority Latino community and 
		drew criticism from the Mexican government and human rights activists.
 
 Zambrano's death was among a series of police shootings across the 
		United States that have put law enforcement agencies under scrutiny over 
		their use of force against minorities.
 
 In announcing his decision, Washington state Attorney General Bob 
		Ferguson said he determined the officers' use of deadly force was 
		justified under state law.
 
 Even so, in a letter to the state's governor, Jay Inslee, who had asked 
		Ferguson's office to review the shooting, Ferguson wrote that he was 
		"deeply troubled by Mr. Zambrano-Montes's death."
 
 "I believe that the use of deadly force in this case, though legally 
		justified, was not the only possible way to protect the police and the 
		public from his dangerous behavior," he said.
 
		
		 
		His decision comes two weeks after the U.S. Justice Department - which 
		also declined to file charges against the officers - said in a report 
		that the Pasco Police Department needs to improve officer training on 
		use-of-force, recruit more Hispanics and women, and increase the number 
		of officers fluent in Spanish, among other criticisms.
 Ferguson's decision also mirrors the 2015 charging decision by a local 
		prosecutor.
 
 The City of Pasco and Police Department said in a statement that the 
		state's review of the case "helps with public confidence of the process" 
		and also said that the department will continue "community outreach and 
		trust-building efforts."
 
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			Relatives of Antonio Zambrano-Montes kneel next to his coffin during 
			a funeral mass in Pomaro, in the Mexican state of Michoacan March 7, 
			2015. Zambrano-Montes, 35, an unemployed orchard worker from 
			Mexico's Michoacan state, was killed in February in Pasco, a city of 
			68,000 residents in Washington state's agricultural heartland. 
			REUTERS/Alan Ortega/File Photo 
            
             
			An attorney for Zambrano's family did not immediately respond to a 
			request for comment.
 Zambrano's family filed a wrongful death lawsuit earlier this year 
			accusing the officers of excessive force.
 
 The officers fired 17 shots at Zambrano after he ignored orders to 
			stop throwing rocks and jogged across a busy intersection. He 
			collapsed on the sidewalk after a volley of bullets, as several 
			witnesses reacted with shock or anger.
 
 The 35-year-old undocumented immigrant, who arrived in Washington 
			state's apple-growing belt seeking opportunity about a decade ago, 
			battled drug use and homelessness in the months leading up to the 
			shooting.
 
 (Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Editing by Michael Perry)
 
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