Wednesday, July 6, 2016

La. cops stun, shoot and kill Alton Sterling for selling CD copies of music

 begin quote from:

La. cops stun, shoot and kill Alton Sterling for selling music

New York Daily News - ‎3 hours ago‎
Chilling cell phone video surfaced Tuesday of two Louisiana cops killing a 37-year-old man selling music outside a Baton Rouge convenience store after an anonymous caller claimed he had a gun.
Protests break out after Baton Rouge police fatally shoot man
Baton Rouge police shooting of Alton Sterling fuels late-night protest
'He's got a gun! Gun': Video showing fatal confrontation emerges after Tuesday morning shooting by Baton Rouge officer
Video captures white Baton Rouge police officer fatally shooting a black man, sparking outrage
Shooting of Alton Sterling

Alton Sterling shot, killed by Louisiana cops during struggle after he was selling music outside Baton Rouge store (WARNING: GRAPHIC CONTENT)

Baton Rouge police officer-involved shooting
The Advocate
 
It’s happened again.
Chilling cell phone video surfaced Tuesday of two Louisiana cops killing a 37-year-old man selling music outside a Baton Rouge convenience store after an anonymous caller claimed he had a gun.
The police gunfire sparked impassioned protests that continued past midnight outside the store — 24 hours after authorities shot Alton Sterling during a fatal 12:35 a.m. encounter. More than 100 demonstrators shouting “no justice, no peace” clogged the street, setting off fireworks and blocking an intersection to protest Sterling's death.
 

Alton Sterling, 37, was shot and killed by police in Baton Rouge, La. on Tuesday.

(Facebook)
The grim 48-second cell phone video of the killing outside Triple S Food Mart shows two police officers tackling and wrestling a heavy-set man in a red shirt against the hood of a car before throwing him to the pavement.
KING: Don't try to make sense of police killing of Alton Sterling
“He’s got a gun,” one officer cries while the pair pinned Sterling to the ground.
“You f-----g move, I swear to God,” the other cop yells, before the two draw their weapons. The terrified bystander turns the camera phone away as five shots ring out — two of which a coroner said struck Sterling in the chest and back.
MAGS OUT; INTERNET OUT; NO SALES; TV OUT; NO FORNS; LOUISIANA BUSINESS INC. OUT (INCLUDING GREATER BATON ROUGE BUSINESS REPORT, 225, 10/12, INREGISTER, LBI CUSTOM); MANDATORY CREDIT

Protestors gather at the intersection of N. Foster and Fairfields after Sterling's death.

(Hilary Scheinuk/AP)
"They shot him?” a man’s startled voice says in the video. “Yes,” a woman replies between sobs.
Officers responded to the store about 12:35 a.m. Tuesday after an anonymous caller said a man selling CDs and wearing a red shirt threatened him with a gun, said Baton Rouge Cpl. L’Jean McKneely.
Alton Sterling's police killing in Louisiana sparks outrage
In Louisiana, gun owners are allowed to carry weapons without a permit as long as they’re over 18 and not felons.
It’s unclear how Sterling obtained the weapon. His rap sheet dates back two decades with several drug, firearm, theft and assault arrests. He was sentenced to five years to prison for marijuana and weapon possession in 2009, the Advocate reported.
The owner of the store had no knowledge of an argument outside his store that led to the initial 911 call.
He later saw officers pull a gun from Sterling’s pocket after the shooting and acknowledged Sterling bought the firearm days earlier for protection after learning other disc sellers in the region had been robbed.
Abdullah Muflahi owns the store where Alton Sterling was shot and witnessed the event.

Abdullah Muflahi owns the store where Alton Sterling was shot and witnessed the event.

(Maya Lau / The Advocate)
“He was screaming, ‘What did I do,’ ‘What's going on,” Triple S Food Mart owner and witness Abdullah Muflahi told the Daily News.
Police confiscated the store’s surveillance footage that Muflahi said would have captured every second of the violent death outside his store.
Muflahi watched police kill Sterling, a father of three children and his friend of six years, he said. Sterling died steps from where he allowed him to peddle music daily.
“His hand was not in his pocket, nor did he have the gun in his hand,” he said, defending Sterling’s final moments.
A cop was seen on video using a stun gun on Sterling before the shooting. 

A cop was seen on video using a stun gun on Sterling before the shooting. 

“While he was laying there dying, the cop went inside his pocket to pull the gun out.”
Police have not confirmed whether Sterling was in possession of a gun.
“I think they really handled it the wrong way,” Muflahi added.
The officers were wearing body cams during the shooting, but the recording devices apparently came loose and were dangling from their chests during the incident, Baton Rouge police spokesman Cpl. L’Jean McKneely told the Advocate, a Baton Rouge newspaper.
At least one dashcam caught the killing on tape.
Sterling's death at the hands of police comes almost two years after Staten Island resident Eric Garner died after being placed in a police chokehold.
Garner, 43 and black, was allegedly selling loose cigarettes on July 17, 2014, when white cop Daniel Pantaleo put the asthmatic man in a banned chokehold and he died after saying he could not breathe. The sickening takedown was captured on video obtained exclusively by the Daily News.
Demonstrators shouted “no justice, no peace” in the wake of Sterling's shooting.

Demonstrators shouted “no justice, no peace” in the wake of Sterling's shooting.

(Travis Spradling / The Advocate)
The death of Garner and other black men in police custody has given rise to protests around the country, as well as the Black Lives Matter movement.
Baton Rouge police officials said two uniformed officers involved were placed on administrative leave following the killing, which is standard procedure in shootings.
“It just didn’t make sense for someone to become so angry that’s suppose to protect our lives and take this young man’s life,” Vereta Lee, a family friend of Sterling’s, told WAFB. “It just doesn’t make sense.”
Tags:
alton sterling
louisiana
police shootings
gun violence
 

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