Showing posts with label Date 22/03/2022. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Date 22/03/2022. Show all posts

Monday 21 March 2022

Brother: Man shot by deputy struggled with mental illness

Brother: Man shot by deputy struggled with mental illness

The brother of a Black man shot to death by a deputy in South Carolina over the weekend says he begged the deputy not to shoot and warned of the man’s mental health issues beforehand

COLUMBIA, S.C. -- The brother of a Black man shot to death by a deputy in South Carolina over the weekend says he begged the deputy not to shoot and warned of the man’s mental health issues beforehand.

Authorities have said deputies were responding to a domestic violence call when 34-year-old Irvin D. Moorer Charley advanced upon them with a wooden stake outside a Columbia home Saturday, and an attempt to use a stun gun failed to stop him from charging at an officer.

Moorer Charley’s brother, Ivan Charley, spoke to The Associated Press on Monday and said he was outside when the first deputy arrived. Ivan Charley says he told the deputy — identified by authorities as John Anderson — that his brother was having a mental health crisis, and asked him not to shoot.

Ivan Charley said his brother was not a threat to family members when the deputies arrived, adding he was only holding a stake. Moore Charley was advancing so slowly that deputies could have used other methods to subdue him, his brother argued.

“He was still alive, but y’all killed him because he had a stick in his hand,” Ivan Charley said. “It’s a stick. ... It’s still wood, and it’s not made of bullets.”

A second deputy, later identified by authorities as Zachary Hentz, arrived and immediately approached with his gun up and pointed toward the house, Charley said.

Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott defended the deputies’ actions in a Sunday news conference, noting that the deputies were protecting themselves in a dangerous situation. Multiple people had said Moorer Charley had injured them and said Moorer Charley was inside with a knife, Lott said.

The sheriff’s office released a short clip of body camera video where Anderson repeatedly yells at Moorer Charley to “Drop the weapon!” as Moorer Charley walks toward the deputy, who is slowly backpedaling. The sheriff's department has declined to release the entire video to the public, but the sheriff said he would play it for the prosecutor, the department's citizen advisory board and for the family. Attorneys for Moorer Charley’s relatives said they were scheduled to view the full body camera footage Monday.

Richland County Coroner Naida Rutherford said deputies tried to use a stun gun but it did not stick to Moorer Charley’s skin. Lott said that immediately after that, Moorer Charley charged Hentz, who shot him four times.

“It was a very close encounter,” Lott said, saying Hentz kept shooting until Moorer Charley dropped to the ground, and that the last shot was from less than 3 feet (1 meter) away. He said deputies tried to resuscitate Moorer Charley until an ambulance arrived.

An incident report filed by an officer who arrived after the shooting says that a person who called 911 said Moorer Charley was assaulting her mother and that he had a knife.

Ivan Charley also disputed that account, saying no knife was ever involved. He said his brother had become agitated and fought with family members inside their mother’s house but had already calmed down by the time the deputies arrived.

But when he saw the deputies, Moorer Charley picked up the wooden stake and slowly walked out of the house into the yard, Ivan Charley said.

Ivan Charley spoke Monday from the yard of his mother’s home, where it had all taken place.

Moorer Charley led a life complicated by mental illness that contributed to the frequent fights he had with his family, his younger brother said.

“We loved to fight each other but we loved each other. That’s all I know,” Ivan Charley said.

The police were often called, said Ivan Charley. But in prior instances, officers never exited the car with their guns drawn, instead talking to Moorer Charley “with common sense” and sometimes giving him rides elsewhere.

“They calmed him down,” Ivan Charley said.

Ivan Charley said the family had previously tried to get Moorer Charley mental health care through the state but had trouble getting him help.

Training records from the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy show Anderson joined the Richland County Sheriff’s Office in October 2020 and Hentz in March 2021.

Those records show Anderson completed mandatory mental illness and domestic violence trainings last year. Hentz completed a domestic violence training in December and had a mental illness training in progress as of February.

A spokesperson for the prosecutor's office, which will decide whether criminal charges are warranted, said Monday the matter was still under investigation.


LA police seek driver after Tesla street stunt ends in crash

LA police seek driver after Tesla street stunt ends in crash

Los Angeles police want the public’s help to identify a hit-and-run Tesla driver who crashed while attempting a stunt on an extremely steep street while spectators recorded videos

The incident occurred at 12:10 a.m. Sunday in the hilly Echo Park area, according to a police statement.

The rented Tesla sped up a street and jumped over the cross street at the top of the hill and descended down the equally steep other side of the hill, crashing into trash cans and two parked vehicles.

Spectators recorded the scene and posted videos on social media accounts. The Los Angeles Police Department's Central Traffic Division posted some of the videos on its YouTube account.

The department said the Tesla was abandoned at the scene and there was no description of the driver.

“A misdemeanor hit-and-run (investigation) was completed, and detectives will be following up with the renter,” the police statement said.

1 injured after freight train derails east of Los Angeles

1 injured after freight train derails east of Los Angeles

A Union Pacific freight train carrying lumber derailed in Southern California, sending 13 rail cars and three locomotives off the tracks

COLTON, Calif. -- A Union Pacific freight train carrying lumber derailed in Southern California on Monday, sending 13 rail cars and three locomotives off the tracks.

The derailment occurred around 7:30 a.m. near Colton, in San Bernardino County east of Los Angeles, according to Union Pacific.

A contractor who was helping with cleanup efforts was injured, said Union Pacific spokesperson Robynn Tysver. The extent of the person's injuries wasn't immediately known.
TV helicopter footage showed several rail cars flipped over with lumber spilled across the tracks.

One of the cars carrying wood caught fire in the derailment, but the flames were quickly extinguished, Tysver said.

The Colton Police Department and San Bernardino County Fire Department responded.

Dredging seeks to free grounded cargo ship in Chesapeake Bay

Dredging seeks to free grounded cargo ship in Chesapeake Bay

The U.S. Coast Guard says dredging has begun to free a cargo ship that's been stranded in the Chesapeake Bay for more than a week

BALTIMORE -- Dredging has begun to free a cargo ship stranded in the Chesapeake Bay for more than a week, the U.S. Coast Guard said Monday.

A salvage company began dredging around the 1,095-foot (334-meter) Ever Forward on Sunday and the work is expected to continue throughout the week, Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Breanna Centeno said in an email. The grounded vessel is stable, poses no pollution threat and isn't impacting Port of Baltimore operations, Centano said.

State and federal agencies have issued all permits, Maryland Port Administration Executive Director William P. Doyle tweeted. Doyle said dredged materials will be used to help rebuild an island off the Eastern Shore, Poplar Island, which has suffered from severe erosion.

The Ever Forward was headed from the Port of Baltimore to Norfolk, Virginia, on March 13 when it ran aground north of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge, the U.S. Coast Guard said. The ship operated by Taiwan-based Evergreen Marine Corp. became stranded outside the shipping channel and officials have said there were no reports of injuries, damage or pollution.

Evergreen said Friday that a plan to refloat the Ever Forward involves dredging the bay's muddy floor, releasing ballast to lighten the ship's load and using tugboats and the ship’s main engine to free the vessel.

The Coast Guard has said officials have not yet determined what caused the Ever Forward to run aground. The ship isn't blocking navigation in the channel, unlike last year's high-profile grounding in the Suez Canal of its sister vessel, the Ever Given, which disrupted the global supply chain for days.

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