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Unarmed Black Man Killed In ‘Mind-Boggling,’ Unjustified Barrage Of Police Gunfire

https://www.huffingtonpost.com/entr...ified-lawyer-says_us_5ad746ede4b03c426daa2a3a

Unarmed Black Man Killed In ‘Mind-Boggling,’ Unjustified Barrage Of Police Gunfire: Lawyer

An attorney for Diante Yarber’s family called it the worst case of “excessive and unnecessary force” he’s ever seen.

A lawyer representing relatives of an unarmed black man killed in a hail of police bullets in a California Walmart parking lot accuses officers of profiling, stalking and unjustifiably shooting him.

Diante “Butchie” Yarber, 26, who had been driving his cousin and friends to a Walmart in Barstow, died when police fired what witnesses told The Guardian sounded like more than 30 bullets. A passenger was seriously wounded.

“They saw a car full of black people sitting in front of a Walmart, and they decided that was suspicious,” Lee Merritt, an attorney representing Yarber’s family, told the paper. “They just began pouring bullets … It’s irresponsible. It’s dangerous. It’s mind-boggling, the use of force.” He said Yarber was hit “an estimated two dozen times.”

The San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department said Barstow officers opened fire after the driver of a black Mustang, wanted for questioning in a recent crime involving a stolen vehicle, suddenly reversed in a getaway attempt, crashed into two patrol cars and “accelerated toward the officers.” Police had been sent to the Walmart lot to investigate “a call of a suspicious vehicle,” the sheriff said in a statement.

Officers involved in the April 5 shooting have been placed on paid administrative leave, police said.

Dale Galipo, an attorney representing Marian Tafoya, 23, a back seat passenger seriously wounded in the shooting, said officers weren’t in the path of the Mustang, so they had no justification to open fire.

Video footage of the car after the shooting shows what appear to be many bullet holes. There’s also minor damage to the front bumper and driver’s side fender, but it’s unclear whether that happened prior to the incident

Yarber’s aunt, Aleta Yarber, said the car belonged to her son, who was a passenger in the vehicle, and hadn’t been reported stolen. She said her son “has not been able to say much of anything” since the shooting, because “it was very traumatizing.”

Yarber was a “loving, caring and a friendly person,” said Samantha Robledo, who has a 7-year-old daughter named Naliyah with Yarber. “Our relationship was like no other,” she told HuffPost. Yarber also has daughters ages 9 and 1.

Yarber’s sister, Ruby Hawkins, told The Guardian that police frequently targeted her brother.

“They are the biggest criminals. They are bullies with badges … I don’t know how you can fear for your life with a person that is moving away from you,” she said.

Merritt, the family’s lawyer, wrote on Facebook that the shooting was ” the worse case of excessive and unnecessary force I have seen in my career.”

“The Yarber family deserves answers in the form of transparency by the Barstow Police Department,” he said. “Body, dash and surveillance video must be turned over to my office immediately. The San Bernardino County district attorney must throughly investigate and zealously prosecute the gunman involved.”

Yarber’s killing comes amid continuing protests against the Sacramento police shooting of Stephon Clark, also an unarmed black man, who was gunned down in his backyard in March.
 
https://www.vox.com/identities/2018...er-police-shooting-barstow-california-walmart

“They just began pouring bullets”: California police kill black man in Walmart parking lot

Diante Yarber’s family says the young father’s death is the result of excessive force.

The police shooting of Diante Yarber, a 26-year-old black man who died after officers fired a barrage of bullets at his car in a crowded parking lot, is raising more questions about race and police use of lethal force.

Yarber was inside a car in a Walmart parking lot in Barstow, California, on April 5 when law enforcement officers arrived, according to a press release. They were responding to a call about a “suspicious vehicle” and attempted to conduct a traffic stop. Yarber reportedly “reversed the vehicle and struck one of the patrol cars.” The release also stated that Yarber accelerated toward the officers and struck a second vehicle before officers opened fire on the car.

In a bystander’s recorded video, blurry footage shows the car being shot at as other people in the parking lot try to take cover. Witnesses have said they heard as many as 30 shots. Afterward, Yarber was pronounced dead at the scene, and two other passengers, a man and a woman, were injured. A third man in the car was uninjured, according to the department press release.

“They saw a car full of black people sitting in front of a Walmart, and they decided that was suspicious,” Lee Merritt, an attorney representing Yarber’s family, told the Guardian. “They just began pouring bullets. … It’s irresponsible. It’s dangerous. It’s mind-boggling, the use of force.”

The officers believed Yarber was a suspect in a recent stolen vehicle incident, according to the press release, but Yarber’s aunt told the Guardian that the vehicle officers fired at belonged to a family member and was never reported stolen.

Dale Galipo, a lawyer representing Marian Tafoya, the woman injured in the vehicle, says that while police argue that the incident was an assault on an officer, the investigation has found that Yarber was unarmed and that officers were not in the path of the vehicle when they fired. Galipo notes that police training suggests that officers not fire at moving vehicles.

The shooting has angered community members, who question why officers fired on the car, killing the father of three. There have been local protests, but outside of the press release, law enforcement has released few details about the incident. The officers have been placed on paid leave while the shooting is being investigated.

Yarber’s death comes mere weeks after Stephon Clark, an unarmed young black man in Sacramento, was killed in his grandparent’s backyard after officers mistook his cellphone for a weapon. The Clark shooting sparked protests and national public outcry and has led to the introduction of a bill that would limit when law enforcement in California can use lethal force.

Research has shown that there are significant racial disparities in police use of force. While these disparities are most commonly attributed to issues like implicit bias and systemic racism, studies have also noted that specific factors like high levels of housing segregation and economic inequality also play a role in where police shootings occur and whom they affect.

According to the Washington Post’s Fatal Force database, some 329 people have been shot and killed by police in 2018. Sixty-three of those people were identified as black in news reports.
 
Walmart has cameras everywhere, even micro camera's implanted on the shelves. They have the video.
Walmart parking lots always have security cams, what happened to the footage?

The video is in police surgery the police video doctor is doing the best hack job on the video as possible to make the police look justified in the situation.
 
The video is in police surgery the police video doctor is doing the best hack job on the video as possible to make the police look justified in the situation.

2 weeks later:

“Police have uncovered footage that provides a clearer picture of what unfolded that night”
 
2 weeks later:

“Police have uncovered footage that provides a clearer picture of what unfolded that night”

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http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-barstow-police-killing-20180418-story.html

Anger spreads over police killing of black man in Walmart parking lot

At a Walmart parking lot in Barstow this month, shoppers ducked for cover as police opened fire on a black man inside a car.

When the confrontation ended, Diante Yarber was dead in a fusillade of what some witnesses counted as 30 shots from officers.


Now, his family is saying the gunfire was excessive, and the case is generating national interest.


A grainy cellphone video captured the sound of the barrage of gunfire as police officers' rounds pierced the black Ford Mustang being driven by the 26-year-old man. But the video does not show the full incident.


Authorities said Yarber was shot dead after he reversed his vehicle, striking a police car, then accelerated toward officers. Police say he then reversed again toward officers, hitting a second cruiser.


Family members and attorneys dispute the scenario and point to a part of the video that appears to show the Mustang moving slowly backward as officers fired.

"They don't have a justification for stopping this car. They saw a car full of black people in front of a Walmart and that was suspicious," said S. Lee Merritt, a nationally known civil rights attorney now representing Yarber's family. " I don't believe I have seen a more brutal shooting. They just began pouring bullets into the car in broad daylight. The car was barely rolling backward. You can walk faster than that."

Attorneys and family members of Diante Yarber said video captured by a witness seems to show that Yarber’s Ford Mustang was moving slowly backward as Barstow police officers repeatedly shot into the vehicle. Yarber was shot dead by police while at the wheel of the car.

The April 5 killing of the man known as "Butchie" spawned a march by about 100 protesters to City Hall and police headquarters. The incident came a month after the high-profile killing of another African American young man, Stephon Clark, by police in Sacramento.


The Yarber case is now under investigation by San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department homicide detectives. San Bernardino County will review that probe and decide whether to file charges.


The killing in the community of about 23,000, where 14.6% of the population is black, is adding fuel to the growing concern about race relations and police tactics.

"We have not heard one word from the city," said Aleta Yarber, Diante Yarber's aunt, whose son was in the back seat of the Mustang, which he owns. "Thank God he wasn't hit too."

Barstow city officials Wednesday refused to answer further questions about the shooting. "The city police department continues to stand firm in its commitment of full cooperation with the County Sheriff's Department in this matter," wrote Anthony Riley, a city spokesman.

The city of Barstow and San Bernardino County Sheriff's Department earlier offed a narrative of what happened.

Sheriff's officials said Barstow officers responded to a report of a "suspicious vehicle." Officers believed the driver was a subject wanted for questioning in a recent crime involving a stolen vehicle. Officials won't say whether Yarber was the person wanted.

Sheriff's officials said that after the officers attempted a traffic stop on the Mustang, Yarber tried to flee, first reversing into one police cruiser before accelerating again toward officers and hitting a second patrol vehicle. At that point, officers opened fire. Officials declined to state how many times officers fired. Two officers have been placed on paid administrative leave.

Yarber had prior convictions for escaping the police and misdemeanor domestic violence and was on three years' probation at the time of the shooting. Court records show he was charged in March with violating his community supervision. But authorities have not said whether officers knew the driver's identity.


He was pronounced dead at the scene while a 23-year-old female passenger was airlifted to a trauma center with multiple gunshot wounds. He is the father of three girls, ages 9, 7 and 1. Two other young men fled from the car during the incident, officials said.


Aleta Yarber said that the official statement isn't credible and that her son was in the back of the car throughout the entire shooting: "It's a two-door car. He couldn't get out." When her son eventually did climb from the car, he was held at the police station until 11 p.m. for questions, she said. Yarber said that police would not tell her what happened and that for a while, all she knew was the driver of her family car had been shot dead.

Dale Galipo, an attorney for the wounded female passenger, said she "suffered serious injuries — two gunshot wounds that while no longer life-threatening are life-altering.

"The shooting was unjustified, and the police version of events contradicts information in the video and given by eyewitnesses," said Galipo, who also represents the family of Clark in Sacramento.

Galipo added that even if it were the case that officers were in the path of the vehicle, training and policies dictate that officers not fire at a moving car.

"You don't shoot the driver because killing him sends the vehicle out of control…. You have passengers who you can hit," he said.

Barstow police since 2014 have worn body cameras, but so far the city has not released any footage or said whether the incident was recorded.

"I will be very interested to see the videos and hear the suspicious vehicle call," said attorney Merritt, who notes the shooting echoes that of 15-year-old Jordan Edwards in 2017 in Texas, which led to charges against an officer. "We're getting our own autopsy done."

Many major police departments and international police organizations direct officers not to fire their weapons into moving cars unless under the most extreme circumstances.

The LAPD 13 years ago prohibited its officers from firing at moving vehicles unless another deadly threat exists. The tightening of policy came after the fatal shooting of 13-year-old Devin Brown, who had led police on a short car chase. The Police Executive Research Forum has also advised departments to add bans on shooting at vehicles to their policies.

But such shootings have continued. Last year a Texas police officer was indicted in Dallas for murder and aggravated assault in the shooting death of Edwards. The African American teenager was shot in the head by a white officer as he drove away from police after leaving a party.

But Ed Obayashi, a Plumas County deputy and legal advisor who is a police shooting expert, said despite these tightened policies, it remains permissible for officers to fire on moving cars if they perceive the vehicle as a threat to life.

"The video shows the tail end of incident from a cellphone perspective with a car seemingly moving slower," he said. "But it doesn't show you what happened with the car before.

"It does not show anything resembling an unreasonable shooting at this stage," Obayashi added. He said the number of shots fired at Yarber is not unusual when officers are dealing with a moving target.
 
https://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-barstow-police-shooting-20181129-story.html

San Bernardino County prosecutors clear Barstow officers in shooting of black man at wheel of Mustang


Prosecutors Thursday declined to charge four Barstow police officers who fatally shot a black man while he was at the wheel of a car, finding that they reasonably used deadly force to protect their lives when the vehicle clipped one of them.

Diante Yarber, 26, was driving the black Ford Mustang in a Walmart parking lot when officers fired 30 rounds into the vehicle on April 5. His death received widespread publicity and sparked large protests in front of Barstow City Hall and police headquarters. The incident came a month after the high-profile killing of another African American young man, Stephon Clark, by police in Sacramento.

Yarber was wanted in connection with a stolen vehicle, and officers believed he was likely at the wheel because the car was registered to a relative, a report by the San Bernardino County district attorney’s office said.

"The officers were aware Yarber was a gang member known to carry guns and run from law enforcement," the report said.

Citing body cams recordings, prosecutors said Yarber ignored instructions to turn off the ignition and show his hands after he was stopped.

Instead, he “put the Mustang in reverse" and struck the front of a patrol car, the report said. Yarber then accelerated the car toward an officer who pointed his handgun and ordered the driver to stop. Hemmed in, Yarber reversed and struck a passenger who had bolted from the Mustang.

Yarber careened the car into another patrol car and then struck Officer Vincent Carrillo in the left thigh after putting the car in reverse. ,After Yarber drove forward and struck another patrol car, Carrillo and Cpl. Jose Barrientos, “afraid for their safety,” fired their handguns, the report said. Officers Matthew Helms and Jimmie Walker "almost simultaneously" opened fire, the report said.

The Mustang then rolled to a stop after striking a patrol car and a civilian vehicle and officers called for medical help to render aid.

"In this case, Officers Carillo, Officer Helms, Officer Walker and Corporal Barrientos each had an honest and objectively reasonable belief that Yarber posed a threat of seriously bodily injury or death to themselves," prosecutors wrote.

Yarber was pronounced dead at the scene while a 23-year-old female passenger was airlifted to a trauma center with multiple gunshot wounds. Two other young men fled from the car during the incident, officials said. Yarber is the father of three girls, ages 9, 7 and 1.

Yarber had prior convictions for fleeing the police and misdemeanor domestic violence and was on three years' probation at the time of the shooting. Court records show he was charged in March with violating his community supervision.

The report from prosecutors noted the background of two of the officers. Walker in 2010 was charged with four misdemeanors including violating a person’s civil rights and he later pleaded guilty to disturbing the peace and public intoxication.

Another officer at the scene, who did not shoot, also had a troubled history. Officer Andrew Buesa while at the Los Angeles Police Department was discharged in connection with misconduct in a 2002 arrest

Yarber’s family has said the shooting was unjustified and filed a federal lawsuit claiming excessive force was used.

Grainy cellphone video from the scene captured the sound of gunfire as police rounds pierced the vehicle and appears to show the Mustang moving slowly backward as the officers fired. But the video does not show the full incident.

“BPD Officers Walker, Barrientos, Carrillo and Helms drew their weapons and began to shout profanities and other violent threats at Diante Yarber as he attempted to step out of the vehicle,” the lawsuit alleges. “The BPD Officers began to take aim at the vehicle and shout threats, profanities and racial slurs."

Family attorney S. Lee Merritt has alleged officers never attempted to render aid to the dying man. Merritt and Yarber’s family had demanded that the officers face criminal charges.
 
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