Post by Milisha on Jan 11, 2009 12:50:44 GMT -5
In the early hours of New Year's Day, 27-year-old BART police officer Johannes Mehserle shot and killed 22-year old Oscar Grant. A number of people who were riding the BART train that night witnessed the shooting, and shot video or photos on handheld cameras or phones. The victim's family today filed a lawsuit for $25 million. Five days after the shooting, the accused officer still has not given a statement. He is said to be have received death threats and authorities are apparently moving him from place to place to protect him from harm. Some people are speculating the shooting may have been an accident -- the officer may have grabbed his gun by mistake because he thought he was instead grabbing a Taser device. I have operated both devices, though certainly not in those extreme stress conditions, and I find that argument hard to understand. The weapons are so different.
Snip from SF Chron article, to that point:
[Use-of-force training and research firm founder Bruce Siddle] said changes in how the brain processes information in a stressful situation might have led the officer to mistake the butt of his service weapon for the Taser. But other experts found the idea that the shooting resulted from such a mix-up hard to believe.
"That's as reflexive as you getting in on the driver's side of the car (instead of) the passenger side if you want to drive it," [Florida criminologist George] Kirkham said. "There's no remote similarity to a conventional firearm. ... The Taser is just like apples and oranges.
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The fact that so many videos and images are surfacing in this case is significant, because each set of images provides a different view of the killing, with different visual information.
Snip from that same SF Chron article:
Roy Bedard, who has trained police officers around the world, advanced a different theory after his first viewing of the video: that the shooting was a pure accident, a trigger pulled because of a loss of balance or a loud noise.
But in an indication of how the videos might move the investigation, Bedard reached a different conclusion after viewing the shooting from a different angle.
"Looking at it, I hate to say this, it looks like an execution to me," he said. "It really looks bad for the officer. ... We have to get inside his head and figure out what he was thinking when he fired the shot.
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Citizen journalism continues to cast light on the deadly police shooting of 22-year-old Oscar Grant in an Oakland BART station on New Year's day. While some of the videos taken with cell phones and video cameras by travelers that morning leave a bit to the imagination, at least one video appears to capture the whole horrible incident from start to finish.
The video, taken through the open door of a nearby train, clearly shows Grant face down on the platform. He's apparently squirming, although not apparently violently struggling. A police officer, since named as Johannes Mehserle, almost casually draws his firearm, points, and then the shot can be clearly heard -- as well as the shocked comments of travelers in the BART station.
After the shooting, the officers step away from Grant in seeming surprise before turning the wounded man on his back. The video ends as the train doors close.
Since the incident, Officer Mehserle has resigned from the BART force rather than speak with internal affairs investigators. The shooting sparked riots in Oakland that have already resulted in charges against protesters -- two weeks before a decision is expected on whether to indict Mehserle.