Minneapolis police releases video of SWAT team shooting dead armed Black
man
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[February 04, 2022]
(Editor's note: This story contains a quote in fourth paragraph
contains offensive language, and video footage and pictures show violent
images)
By Shubham Kalia and Shivani Tanna
(Reuters) - A 22-year-old armed Black man
was fatally shot by a Minneapolis police SWAT team during a raid on his
apartment on Wednesday, video recorded by a police body camera showed.
The Minneapolis Police Department released the video and a still image
on Thursday showing the man, Amir Locke, held a gun in his hand as he
twisted round beneath a blanket after being roused by police, with
several armed officers looming over the sofa where he lay.
The incident will inevitably stoke memories of George Floyd, an unarmed
Black man who was killed in the same city almost two years ago by a
white officer who knelt on his neck for over nine minutes during an
arrest. Outrage over Floyd's death sparked a mass movement challenging
police brutality and bias in the U.S. criminal justice system.
The video shows police unlocking Locke's apartment with a key, and
officers shouting "police, search warrant, get on the ground, get on the
fucking ground," as they went in.
An officer then kicks at the couch that Locke was lying on, and as Locke
turns, one arm comes out from beneath the blanket, the hand holding a
gun.
Almost immediately three shots were fired, and Locke sprawls back, still
twisted up in the blanket.
In a statement released on Wednesday, the Minneapolis Police Department
said that the man had a "handgun pointed in the direction of the
officers."
During a press conference on Thursday interim Minneapolis Police
Department chief Amelia Huffman said the county's attorney will review
the facts, in response to a question pointing out that the video
appeared to show that Locke's gun was pointed towards the floor.
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Amir Locke (22) holds a gun as he unfolds a blanket before being
shot and killed by Minneapolis police's SWAT team, in Minneapolis,
Minnesota, U.S., February 2, 2022, in this screen grab taken from a
video. Video taken February 2, 2022. Minneapolis Police
Department/Handout via REUTERS
"As there's a gun emerging in your
direction, you are forced to make a split second decision on when
it's a threat," Huffman added.
Locke was taken to the Hennepin County medical center after the
shooting, where he died on Wednesday.
Ben Crump and Jeff Storms, lawyers representing Locke's family in
the case, compared the killing to Breonna Taylor and George Floyd,
and said that the available information reflected that Locke was not
the subject of police's warrant.
Huffman confirmed that Locke was not named in the search warrant
issued in relation to Saint Paul's police homicide investigation.
"It is unclear at this time how he or if he was connected to the
Saint Paul's investigation," Huffman said.
She went on to say that officers from the Saint Paul's Police
Department were at the scene later and had recovered possible
evidence for the homicide investigation.
According to the lawyers, Locke had no criminal history and legally
possessed a firearm at the time of his death.
"In the wake of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, the City of
Minneapolis told the public that it was limiting the use of no-knock
warrants to 'limit the likelihood of bad outcomes.' Less than two
years later, Amir Locke and his family needlessly suffered the worst
possible outcome," Storms said in a statement.
Taylor, a Black woman was shot and killed when armed police raided
her Kentucky apartment in March 2020. Floyd was killed in May 2020.
(Reporting by Shivani Tanna and Shubham Kalia in Bengaluru; Editing
by Simon Cameron-Moore)
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