San Diego officials approve $30M settlement for family of teen killed by
police
[December 10, 2025]
By JULIE WATSON
SAN DIEGO (AP) — The San Diego City Council on Tuesday approved a $30
million payment to the family of a 16-year-old killed by police in one
of the largest such settlements in U.S. history.
The settlement exceeds the $27 million the city of Minneapolis agreed to
pay the family of George Floyd, whose May 2020 murder by a police
officer who knelt on his neck sparked a nationwide racial reckoning.
Surveillance and body-worn camera footage from Jan. 28 showed Konoa
Wilson running away from someone who pulled a gun and fired at him in a
downtown train station. As he exited the station, Wilson encountered San
Diego Police Officer Daniel Gold.
In the lawsuit against the city and Gold, the family alleged the officer
“instantly, without any warning,” fired two shots at Wilson as he ran
by, striking him in the upper body. The lawsuit identified Wilson as
Black.
Councilmember Henry Foster III became emotional when speaking about the
shooting, sharing his fears about the dangers that Black youth face: “If
only you could understand the fear I feel when my son leaves the house."
"Kanoa’s life was taken while fleeing from gunshots, and he found
himself running into the arms of a police officer. This should not have
happened,” Foster said.
He also questioned the state of reform since Floyd’s death: “Where’s the
progress? Where’s the protect and serve? Better yet, where’s the
accountability?”
He challenged Mayor Todd Gloria and Police Chief Scott Wahl to do
better.
Lt. Cesar Jimenez, a spokesperson for the San Diego Police Department,
said Gold is currently on an administrative assignment while the
shooting is under investigation.

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This undated photo provided by Trial Lawyers for Justice shows Konoa
Wilson, left, posing with his father, Steven Lee Wilson. (Trial
Lawyers for Justice via AP)

The department in releasing the body camera footage stated that
officers found a gun under Wilson’s clothing as they administered
first aid, though the teen did not pull it out before being shot by
Gold.
The lawsuit said Gold did not announce he was a police officer until
after shooting him in the back. It said Wilson was running past the
officer “in an attempt to get to a place of safety."
Wilson was pronounced dead less than an hour after he was taken to
the hospital.
The family's attorney, Nick Rowley, said the settlement “brings some
semblance of accountability, but not closure.”
“You don’t get closure when your child is shot in the back for doing
nothing wrong by the people who are supposed to be protecting him,”
he said in a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press. "We hope
that Konoa’s story will send a message across the country: Cities
will pay dearly when officers violate the law and take a life
without justification.”
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