Protests grow tense after police slaying
of black man in California
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[September 29, 2016]
By Dan Whitcomb and Marty Graham
EL CAJON, Calif. (Reuters) - A second night
of mostly peaceful protests over the fatal police shooting in Southern
California of an unarmed black man said to be mentally ill climaxed on
Wednesday as protesters confronted officers in riot gear who retreated
as tensions rose.
Protesters earlier in the day shouted "murder" and demanded a federal
investigation of Tuesday's shooting in the San Diego suburb of El Cajon,
which came just as racially charged anger over similar incidents in two
other U.S. cities during the past two weeks had begun to subside.
The Tuesday mid-afternoon shooting unfolded after two El Cajon police
officers responded to several calls about a mentally unstable person
walking in traffic, then confronted the man behind a restaurant.
One policeman opened fire with his service pistol and his partner
simultaneously fired a Taser stun gun when the man pulled an object from
his pocket and took aim at them in a "shooting stance," according to
police.
No weapon from the man, however, was recovered at the scene, police
said. The object he was said to be carrying was not specified.
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The next day, Mayor Bill Wells confirmed the victim's identity as Alfred
Olango, a 38-year-old Ugandan immigrant with a U.S. felony record of
convictions for drug and weapon offenses, according to federal court
records.
Friends and activists said Olango was mentally ill and may have been
suffering a seizure in the moments before his death.
Police said they obtained cellphone video of the shooting from a
bystander, but authorities released only a still frame showing two
officers pointing weapons at a man who was aiming an object at them.
In a separate video clip taken moments after the shooting and posted on
social media, a woman who refers to herself as the victim's sister is
heard crying in anguish, "Oh my God. You killed my brother. I just
called for help and ... you killed him."
Wells told a news conference on Wednesday that he had seen the footage
obtained by police. He described it as "certainly enlightening," adding,
"I don’t believe that this is going to be a tremendously complicated
process for people to figure out what happened."
“I saw a man who was distraught, a man who was acting in ways that
looked like he was in great pain, and I saw him get gunned down and
killed, and it broke my heart. If it was my son I would be devastated,”
Wells said.
Wells said all 120 officers on El Cajon's police force receive training
from San Diego County's Psychiatric Emergency Response Teams, or PERT,
program, though no PERT-assigned officer was available for dispatch to
Tuesday's call.
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CRIES FOR 'JUSTICE'
Two other black men were killed days earlier by police in questionable
circumstances in Charlotte, North Carolina, and Tulsa, Oklahoma,
igniting demonstrations decrying racial bias by U.S. law enforcement.
Authorities imposed a state of emergency and a curfew to quell unrest in
Charlotte.
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Protesters gather along Broadway Avenue to protest the fatal
shooting of an unarmed black man on Tuesday by officers in El Cajon,
California, U.S. September 28, 2016. REUTERS/Sandy Huffaker
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Olango's slaying in California likewise immediately sparked hours of
angry protests near the shooting scene.
Speaking to reporters the next day, El Cajon Police Chief Jeff Davis
appealed for calm and urged against rushing to judgment. The
predominantly white city is home to some 100,000 people, including
many residents who are immigrants from the Middle East and Africa.
Civil rights activists and several hundred protesters returned to
the streets on Wednesday, gathering first outside the police
department to chant "murder," "justice for Alfred Olango" and "black
lives matter."
"We are not going to stop until we get justice," the Reverend Shane
Harris, president of the National Action Network's San Diego
chapter, said at the rally.
Protests continued after dark with hundreds of people marching from
the shooting scene to City Hall and back, shouting Olango's name,
taunting police and periodically blocking traffic.
The crowd later staged a boisterous but peaceful rally near the site
of Olango's death that turned tense when police officers, who
initially kept a low profile, made a renewed show of force in riot
gear.
A standoff appeared on the verge of escalation as some protesters
hurled water bottles at police, who stood their ground before
pulling back in what seemed to be a tactical retreat.
Demonstrators milled about the streets afterward, but the mood grew
more relaxed and the crowds gradually diminished with no immediate
signs of further lawlessness.
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The San Diego County District Attorney was investigating the
shooting, and police said the bystander's video would be released
once that probe was complete. Wells said the FBI also was probing
the incident.
(Additional reporting by Norma Galeana and Alan Devall in El Cajon,
Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles, Laila Kearney in New York and
Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by
Raissa Kasolowsky, Jeffrey Benkoe and Bernard Orr)
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