This Article is From Jan 09, 2015

Police Gave Boy No Aid After Shooting in Cleveland

The two Cleveland police officers involved in the fatal shooting of Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old boy who was carrying a pellet gun, stood by without rendering medical aid as the boy lay wounded next to their patrol car, a newly released extended surveillance video shows.

Then, about a minute and a half after one officer had shot Tamir, the other officer tackled the boy's 14-year-old sister as she tried to reach her brother. Tamir was shot Nov. 22 after someone called 911 to report "a guy" who had been pointing a "probably fake" pistol outside a community recreation center on Cleveland's west side.

The video, obtained by the Northeast Ohio Media Group, provided fresh detail about a shooting that roiled Cleveland and quickly became the latest shooting to be absorbed into a broader national narrative about police violence in African-American communities.

The surveillance tape also seemed to clarify an issue in the shooting investigation: that the officers provided no immediate medical assistance to Tamir, who was not pronounced dead until more than nine hours later at a Cleveland hospital. An autopsy by the Cuyahoga County medical examiner later found that Tamir died from a gunshot wound to the abdomen.

In addition, it confirmed the account that Tamir's mother, Samaria Rice, gave in the weeks after the shooting, that the police had tackled and detained her daughter as she rushed out of the recreation center, trying to reach her brother's side.

After the second Cleveland officer, Frank Garmback, subdued Tamir's sister - he pushed her to the ground back-first, tumbling on top of her in the process - the girl was handcuffed and put in the back of the police cruiser, a few feet from her brother.

The officers stood by without tending to Tamir, the extended video showed. It was not until four minutes after the shooting, the video showed, that Tamir received medical assistance when another man was seen bent down next to him. According to the Rice family's lawyer, Benjamin Crump, the man who provided the first medical assistance was an FBI agent who was in the neighborhood.

Paramedics arrived eight minutes after the shooting, and Tamir was taken away on a stretcher about five minutes later, the video shows.

A shorter surveillance video released earlier showed Tamir being shot by a rookie Cleveland officer, Timothy Loehmann, seconds after the police cruiser arrived and skidded to a stop next to the boy at a gazebo outside the recreation center. The black pistol that Tamir had, which looked like a real handgun, was an imitation. His mother later said it had been given to Tamir to play with by a friend that afternoon.

The police said Tamir was told to raise his hands but instead reached to his waistband for the gun, though the previously released surveillance video showed that the shooting happened so fast, it was hard to know whether the officer issued any warnings or whether Tamir could have understood them if he did.

The killing, which occurred two weeks before a Justice Department report concluded that the Cleveland police had a pattern of "unreasonable and unnecessary use of force," angered many residents of the city, which has a black majority.On Thursday, the city's media relations director, Dan Williams, said the extended video was released once it was clear that it would not interfere with the investigation. "My intent was to get it out so the public could see all of the tape," Williams said.

A Cleveland police spokeswoman said the police could not comment because the shooting was under investigation. Officials from Cleveland's main police union did not respond to a request for comment.

In an interview, Crump called the events on the video "outrageous and inhumane."

"How inhumane to put her in handcuffs and sit her in the car about four feet from where her brother lay dying," Crump said of Tamir's sister, "and she has to watch that. And they rendered no aid to this kid."

Family members thought it was important, Crump said, for "people to see this video as they continue to fight for justice and see whether the grand jury will hold the police officer accountable."

Crump said an audio recording from a phone of someone at the recreation center indicated Tamir was still alive when the officers were detaining his sister. The recording, he said, reveals that a teenager had tried to calm Tamir's sister as she rushed to the shooting, saying: "He's not dead. He's still moving."

Loehmann, 26, who fired the fatal shot, had quit a suburban police force after his supervisors determined two years ago that he had had a "dangerous loss of composure" during firearms training and was emotionally unprepared to cope with stresses of the job. The Cleveland police acknowledged that they had never reviewed the previous police personnel file of Loehmann.

Both officers have been placed on restricted duty.

© 2015, The New York Times News Service
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