21yo Black Man Dead After Fight With Baltimore County Officers...

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stringer bell
stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bs-md-co-police-fight-20160920-story.html
Man dies 3 days after allegedly fighting with Baltimore County police in Middle River

21-year-old Baltimore County man died Wednesday, days after police say he struggled with several police officers in Middle River.

Tawon Boyd was injured in the confrontation Sunday morning, authorities said, but they did not provide details. An attorney for Boyd’s family said his kidneys and heart failed.

An autopsy is to be performed to determine the cause of death, authorities said, and the county police and fire departments are conducting internal investigations.

Police say officers who were called to the first block of Akin Circle in Middle River just after 3 a.m. Sunday arrived at a chaotic scene. They said Boyd’s girlfriend had called 911 and said he was acting “crazy.”

Officers said they found Boyd “confused and paranoid, sweating heavily.”

Boyd tried to run to different police cars and get inside and was banging on neighbors’ doors, according to police and his grandmother.

Linda Burch, Boyd’s grandmother, lived with the couple and their toddler son on Akin Circle. She said Boyd “was acting kind of strange, like he was on something.”

But she said police used too much force to restrain him.


“He was just hollering and screaming on the ground, and they just kept pushing him down, pushing him down, on his shoulder and back and stuff, hitting him,” Burch said. “He was trying to get them off of him.”

Burch said she and Boyd’s girlfriend were afraid he would be seriously hurt.

“I kept telling them stop before they hurt him because I told them they could ? him like that,” she said. “They told me to go across the street before they lock me up.”

Police said Boyd resisted arrest. They said three officers who restrained Boyd were injured. One wrote in a police report that he punched Boyd twice because Boyd was hanging onto him.

The officers said they were able to finally restrain Boyd by holding him down with their arms and body weight.

Medics were called and administered something to Boyd, but the treatment was redacted in the police report, and police officials said medical privacy laws prevented them from releasing it.

Boyd calmed down, police said, and an officer asked a medic to check his pulse. Boyd was still breathing and had a heartbeat as he was loaded into an ambulance, police said.

“Mr. Boyd was in need of medical attention, and the police responded with violence,” said Latoya Francis-Williams, the family’s attorney. “The police beat him into intensive care, and now he’s no longer with us.”

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  • ChillaDaKilla
    ChillaDaKilla Members, Banned Users Posts: 7,082 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Same ? different day
  • ChillaDaKilla
    ChillaDaKilla Members, Banned Users Posts: 7,082 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • 1CK1S
    1CK1S Members Posts: 27,471 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    This story seems all over the place. I need to read more into this!
  • iron man1
    iron man1 Members Posts: 29,989 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Brothas there's too much this week man smh
  • (ob)Scene
    (ob)Scene Members Posts: 4,729 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    iron man1 wrote: »
    Brothas there's too much this week man smh

    It's no different than any other week. The powers that be just wait until one high profile incident gains steam so that they can then flood the airwaves and exploit our anger.
  • VulcanRaven
    VulcanRaven Members Posts: 18,859 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    WTF I'm close to Middle River. Tons of cops in this area with nothing to do. Cops just riding around looking for someone to ? with
  • the dukester
    the dukester Members Posts: 1,822 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    We gotta teach our women to stop calling the police in crises situations.

    More often than not, it's turning out to be a death sentence.
  • D. Morgan
    D. Morgan Members Posts: 11,662 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    We gotta teach our women to stop calling the police in crises situations.

    More often than not, it's turning out to be a death sentence.

    Thats going to be tough to do. So many believe in white daddy will take of them from food stamps, section 8 to child support cases. They know it benefits them.

    If she called the police first she ? up. Now if she called some of his family and friends first and got no response cause its 3am then I can understand why she called them. That still doesn't explain why the police beat that young man like that though.

    My wife friend called the police on her son not to long ago and I have basically not even wanted that ? in my house since then. She didn't call his father or step-father, brother, cousins or uncles first before calling the police. I damn near hate that ? for doing that.
  • D0wn
    D0wn Members Posts: 10,818 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited September 2016
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    D. Morgan wrote: »
    We gotta teach our women to stop calling the police in crises situations.

    More often than not, it's turning out to be a death sentence.

    Thats going to be tough to do. So many believe in white daddy will take of them from food stamps, section 8 to child support cases. They know it benefits them.

    If she called the police first she ? up. Now if she called some of his family and friends first and got no response cause its 3am then I can understand why she called them. That still doesn't explain why the police beat that young man like that though.

    My wife friend called the police on her son not to long ago and I have basically not even wanted that ? in my house since then. She didn't call his father or step-father, brother, cousins or uncles first before calling the police. I damn near hate that ? for doing that.

    Many blk women have bitterness and resentment towards blk men.
    Recently, Ive heard some blk women say, they feel comfortable around the cops, and get anxiety while walking around blk men in their own community.
  • D. Morgan
    D. Morgan Members Posts: 11,662 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    D0wn wrote: »
    D. Morgan wrote: »
    We gotta teach our women to stop calling the police in crises situations.

    More often than not, it's turning out to be a death sentence.

    Thats going to be tough to do. So many believe in white daddy will take of them from food stamps, section 8 to child support cases. They know it benefits them.

    If she called the police first she ? up. Now if she called some of his family and friends first and got no response cause its 3am then I can understand why she called them. That still doesn't explain why the police beat that young man like that though.

    My wife friend called the police on her son not to long ago and I have basically not even wanted that ? in my house since then. She didn't call his father or step-father, brother, cousins or uncles first before calling the police. I damn near hate that ? for doing that.

    Many blk women have bitterness and resentment towards blk men.
    Recently, Ive heard some blk women say, they feel comfortable around the cops, and get anxiety while walking around blk men in their own community.

    That ? is sad. I get being aware but I can't get with being afraid of my own people. Don't put nothing pass anyone but I also ain't judging and assigning guilt to people for ? that they haven't done.
  • black caesar
    black caesar Members Posts: 12,036 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Damn another unarmed black man gets killed. The Baltimore cops are out there sending a message.
  • yellowtapesport
    yellowtapesport Members Posts: 4,662 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    we rioting at CVS today or what my ? ...
  • Karl.
    Karl. Members Posts: 8,015 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I see a lot of people are saying he called the cops about an intruder?
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/crime/bs-md-co-police-fatal-boyd-20160922-story.html
    Tawon Boyd's family, attorneys question why fatal force was used during 'medical crisis'

    The attorneys for a Baltimore County man who died following a struggle with police questioned why officers used fatal force while responding to a call the family says was for a "medical crisis."

    Attorney A. Dwight Pettit said Tawon Boyd, 21, called 911 on Sunday requesting medical personnel, but instead ended up in a violent confrontation with police officers at his Middle River home.

    Boyd was injured and taken to Franklin Square Hospital, where he died Wednesday afternoon.

    "It makes one wonder what policies and procedures the county and the Police Department might have when there's a medical crisis," Pettit said Thursday.

    The Baltimore County police and fire departments are conducting an administrative review of the incident, and the state medical examiner will conduct an autopsy, the county said Thursday.

    Police initially said Boyd's girlfriend called 911 to report he was acting "crazy." But on Thursday, the department said Boyd was the caller. Police said they originally thought the girlfriend was the caller because information from the dispatcher said: "female yelling on the phone."

    A second 911 call placed about 20 minutes later consisted "mostly of screaming and other noise," said police, adding it was unclear who placed that call.

    Latoya Francis-Williams, another attorney for the family, said Boyd "was simply confused, [there was] never any allegation he was acting out" or a danger to anyone, including himself.

    "I'm kind of at a loss for words. I just want my son back," said Boyd's mother, Martha Boyd, who spoke briefly at the news conference at Pettit's office. "They could've tased him. They could've maced him. They could've helped. He called for help."

    Pettit likened the police response to Boyd to the fatal shooting in August of Korryn Gaines by a Baltimore County police officer. Gaines, 23, was fatally shot following an hours-long standoff with police, prompting criticism from Gaines' family and others who said the incident could have been resolved peacefully.

    The county state's attorney's office announced Wednesday there would be no charges filed against the officer who shot Gaines.

    Pettit said the family is awaiting Boyd's autopsy, which he called a "a crucial piece of evidence," along with the police report and witnesses statements.

    Officers were called about 3 a.m. Sunday to Boyd's home in the first block of Akin Circle, according to the police report. At the home, police said Boyd and his girlfriend, Deona Styron, were screaming at each other, and that Boyd kept yelling, "There is someone in the house you need to go inside and search!"

    Officer Seckens, who wrote the report, said Boyd was sweating heavily and "appeared to be consumed and paranoid." (The county releases only the last names of officers involved in incidents, according to an agreement struck with the police union.)

    Styron told the officers that Boyd had been drinking and smoking marijuana, the report said.

    When an officer tried to speak to Boyd, he "started running and screaming," the report said, and he tried to get into a marked police car through the driver's-side door, and then into a second police car. Officers ran across the street to stop Boyd, who started yelling for someone to call the police.

    Three officers at the scene tried to calm Boyd to take him in for an evaluation but could not, the report said, prompting them to try to take him into custody. Officer Garland grabbed Boyd's arm, but Boyd pulled away. The officers ordered Boyd to get on the ground and put his hands behind his back, but they said he did not comply with the orders, according to the report.

    Officer Bowman grabbed Boyd, and the officers forced him to the ground, but Boyd "continued to push, kick and flail," and then kicked one officer in the head and Officer Bowman in the face.

    Bowman then hit Boyd twice in the face with a closed fist, the report said. Bowman let go of Boyd, but police said he did not comply with the officers' order to get on the ground.

    The report said medics were requested because of Boyd's injuries from Bowman's blows. Two more officers, Holt and Blackburn, arrived at the scene. Blackburn held Boyd's hands above his head, while Holt grabbed some flex cuffs and placed them on Boyd's feet to keep him from kicking.

    Medics arrived and after observing his behavior, one medic administered something to Boyd, but the treatment was redacted in the police report. Police officials said medical privacy laws prevented them from releasing it.

    Pettit said he does not know what was given to Boyd.

    Boyd's mother said that her son was working as a forklift operator and that he and Styron have a 3-year-old son together, and that Styron is pregnant with his second child.

    "The way they're putting it, it's like he just attacked them," said Boyd's uncle, Prinice Thomas. "What they're saying is unbelievable."

    "We was planning on having a wedding and a baby shower, not a funeral," Thomas said.
  • VulcanRaven
    VulcanRaven Members Posts: 18,859 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    ? don't add up. Never believe what cops say. If you had someone on the ground you don't puch them. Just went by Franklin Square yesterday. This ? is out of control.
  • Broddie
    Broddie Members Posts: 11,750 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Jesus Christ. They are really beyond bold at this point aren't they?
  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/maryland/investigations/bs-md-co-korryn-gaines-timeline-20161103-story.html
    Investigative files provide new insights into Korryn Gaines' 6-hour standoff with Baltimore County police

    Korryn Gaines case: Evidence details her 6-hour standoff with Baltimore County police

    Korryn Gaines stared into her cellphone camera.

    "This is for anybody who wanna know what I'm doing," she said, panning down to a shotgun perched in her lap. She turned the camera toward her pajama-footed 5-year-old son, who smiled and waved. Then back to herself.

    "I'm m— f— tired, but the devil at my door, and he's refusing to leave," said Gaines, 23, with a cartoon blanket wrapped around her shoulders. "I'm at peace. I'm in my home. I ain't trying to hurt nobody. ... They been quiet a while so they plotting to come in here and disturb the peace. ... I am not a criminal."

    Outside Gaines' Randallstown apartment, Baltimore County police were in the midst of a tactical operation aimed at coaxing Gaines out. Minutes later, they would secure a warrant for her arrest on charges of assault and resisting arrest, alleging she pointed her shotgun at an officer after police kicked in the door to serve pre-existing warrants on her and her fiance that morning.

    Eight family members gathered at a church nearby, desperately waiting for answers.

    The Baltimore Sun obtained the video through a public records request for the evidence that prosecutors reviewed to determine that the fatal police shooting of Gaines and the wounding of her son Kodi — at the end of a six-hour standoff on Aug. 1 — were legally justified.

    The evidence includes the contents of Gaines' mobile phone, hours of police radio chatter never before heard by the public, hundreds of photos and documents, and statements from the officers involved. It provides a rare look at the buildup to a deadly police encounter, at a time when such incidents are under intense national scrutiny.

    While most of the case file presents the police version of events, Gaines' voice is present through extensive recordings she made while police staged outside her home. She used her phone to communicate with the outside world through an array of platforms, including text messages, FaceTime, Facebook, Instagram and Snapchat.

    The department ultimately took the unprecedented step of asking Facebook and Instagram to temporarily deactivate her accounts, believing social media was distracting her from negotiations with police.

    Key points in the encounter — including when officers entered the apartment and fatal shots were fired — were not recorded, either by Gaines or police. The officers involved were not wearing body cameras.

    Gaines' killing has spurred intense controversy in the months since. Gaines' family has filed a lawsuit against the county and some of the officers involved. The NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund has called for an independent review of Gaines' death and Police Department policies.

    Police declined to comment for this article, citing pending litigation in the case. An administrative review of the incident remains open. A separate review of the tactical response, standard after any barricade situation, also remains open.

    The evidence does not answer all of the questions. What it shows is an emotionally charged standoff that played out in fits and starts — and then ended in a sudden burst of violence.

    At the door

    It was already 80 degrees outside when Officers Allen Griffin and John Dowell arrived at the three-story Carriage Hill apartment complex that Monday morning, looking for Apartment T4.

    Police had two warrants: one for Gaines and another for her fiance, Kareem Courtney, 39. Gaines was wanted for failing to appear in court on charges related to a March traffic stop. Courtney was wanted on an assault charge related to domestic violence allegations filed by Gaines.

    Griffin knocked on the door about 9 a.m., announcing they were police. No one answered, but the officers said they could hear coughs and a crying child.

    They called for another officer from the Woodlawn precinct, who went to the apartment building's rental office and got a key for the apartment. Officers tried to open the door with the key but found that it was also chain-locked.

    Dowell kicked in the door, and Griffin went inside, according to documents filed in Baltimore County District Court. Gaines, seated on the floor, allegedly pointed a black shotgun at Griffin and told the officers to leave.

    Gaines had bought the weapon 11 months before, for $429 at a store called The Cop Shop near downtown Baltimore. According to her family, she bought it after someone broke into her home.

    At 9:41 a.m., tactical officers and members of the department's Hostage Negotiation Team were paged to the apartment. Police were now describing the incident as a barricade situation.

    At the start, there were four people in the apartment: Gaines, Courtney, Gaines' son Kodi and the couple's 1-year-old daughter. But Courtney left apartment with the 1-year-old and surrendered to officers. He told police that he had tried to bring Kodi out as well, but the child went back to his mother.

    Now, it was only Gaines and Kodi in the apartment on Sulky Court, and an increasing number — eventually dozens — of tactical, hostage negotiation and patrol officers outside.

    Gaines remained connected to her family and friends on social media.

    "She is texting and Facebooking her father," police noted in a timeline of events at 10:54 a.m.

    But Gaines' mother, Rhonda Dormeus, believes her daughter never knew that family members, including her parents, grandmother and cousins, were gathered nearby at the Colonial Baptist Church, where police set up a staging area. The relatives spent the day in a day care classroom at the church.

    "My baby felt like she was alone," Dormeus said. "She had no idea that we were there."

    Dormeus said police took her phone and used it to send messages to her daughter, pretending to be her. But she said police did not use the same language she would have.

    "She knew it wasn't me," Dormeus said.

    'Collective trauma'

    Gaines' communications and social media activity became central to the standoff.

    Police believed that they were a significant distraction from negotiations, documents and audio files in the case file show. Gaines turned to her devices throughout the day to document her interactions with police — something she had done before.

    In March, Gaines was arrested by county police for disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and other charges after being pulled over on traffic violations not far from her home. In videos she recorded of that encounter, she discussed incidents of police brutality and killings of black people across the country.

    She told an officer that she didn't "participate" in laws governing the state's roadways, and a police report from the incident said a cardboard sign on the back of her car read: "Any Government official who compromises this pursuit to happiness and right to travel will be held criminally responsible and fined, as this is a natural right or freedom."

    Gaines also told an officer during the stop that she believed Baltimore County police would ? her.

    "I'm not going to murder you, I promise you that," an officer says in one video.

    "Oh, OK, well one of you will," she said. "One of you will. I promise you, you will."

    In the days after her March traffic stop, she wrote in an Instagram post that all she could think about was Sandra Bland, the 28-year-old woman who died in a Texas jail days after her arrest during a contentious traffic stop.



  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    J. Wyndal Gordon, a lawyer for the Gaines family and for Courtney, believes that Gaines, like other black Americans, was psychologically affected by seeing images of police killings across the country.

    "It impacts us," he said. "It's like a collective trauma that we all feel."

    Gaines had also suffered from anxiety and depression, her mother said in an interview. In the summer of 2014, she had a "breakdown" and was hospitalized. At the time, her mother said, Gaines was filled with anxiety about how to handle a large monetary settlement related to a lawsuit over her exposure to lead paint as a child.

    Talks continue

    Throughout the Aug. 1 standoff, officers discussed what mobile devices Gaines was using and how they could open a direct line of contact with her. One officer wondered about Gaines posting messages on social media, and whether they could jam her phone service and disrupt her access.

    "It's a phone that the number's already dead," an officer responded. "She's just using the Wi-Fi portion. We can't control that phone."

    Police commandeered the apartment of Gaines' next-door neighbor, Ramone Coleman, drilling holes in his living room, bedroom and bathroom walls to monitor Gaines' movements with surveillance equipment connected to TV-like monitors.

    At one point, police noted Kodi brought peanut butter and jelly sandwiches from the kitchen to his mother. Over the course of the day, she used her phone to record police, at times posting videos to social media.

    "Ain't nobody getting hurt today, I promise you," an officer in the hall tells Gaines in one exchange she filmed. "You, me, the baby, can go sit, we talk, I get you something to drink, something to eat, whatever you want. But I'm telling you, OK, I promise you — that gun you have, that is not a solution, dear."

    Gaines also recorded phone conversations with a police negotiator, Sgt. Kathy Greenbeck.

    "So right now, all we're really looking for is for you to come out without any weapons, and for your son to come out, so that we can talk with you," Greenbeck said.

    "OK, well, what you just said is just not what I got from these people who are standing outside my door," Gaines replied. "I'm sure that they are going to tell you the best story to make me look like I'm the criminal, or I'm doing something wrong. But I already explained to you that the only thing that I'm doing right now is keeping my peace."

    Gaines recounted to the negotiator her traffic stop arrest in March, when she said she was "kidnapped" by police and suffered a miscarriage of twins during hours of mistreatment starting at the Police Department's Woodlawn precinct.

    "Goodness. So that was a bad experience," Greenbeck said.

    Gaines said she believed the officers at her door were trying to take her back to the precinct. According to police, Gaines was taken to Northwest Hospital after scuffling with officers during the traffic stop, treated, and then processed at the precinct and released.

    "Well, I can hear how upset you are about that. And I am so sorry that you —" the negotiator began, before Gaines interrupted.

    She sounded like she was crying. She said she was not a criminal.

    "I believe that you're not looking to hurt anybody," Greenbeck said.

    "And I don't need anybody here to hurt me, either," Gaines said. Police, she said, could never convince her that "50 guns surrounding my home" were necessary.

    Gaines also told the negotiator about Courtney spending time in prison in the past — he has a criminal record in Baltimore, including for attempted murder — and its effect on the family.

    "Those are moments that you can never get back," she said.

    In documents, police say Gaines repeatedly hung up on Greenbeck during their conversations.

    Gordon, the Gaines' family attorney, described the footage as "chilling."

    "What I saw is a very frightened person, a person who's filled with anxiety and a lot of distrust," he said. "At the end of the day, she just wanted to feel safe."

  • stringer bell
    stringer bell Members Posts: 26,212 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    Negotiation breakdown

    Throughout the day, police were gathering information from Gaines' family. Courtney told them that she had mental health issues and had been off her medication.

    At one point, they learned that Kodi's father was a former county police officer. They considered having him contact her, but learned they were no longer close.

    Gaines' father recorded a message that police planned to play for her over the phone, but Gaines never got it. Police wrote in documents detailing the incident that negotiations broke down before they could deliver the message. It's unclear what the message said.

    Police said they wanted to avoid talking about the March traffic stop, believing it was "one of her triggers" to becoming emotional.

    About 2 p.m., police asked Facebook to shut down Gaines' account but didn't immediately hear back. They also asked the company to shut down her Instagram account. Police officers consulted with a psychologist about their decision to make the request, according to their notes.

    "We've never done it before," an officer said on the radio. The decision would prove controversial among activists who say it prevented Gaines from posting video of police at a time when citizen videos of law enforcement have sparked a national dialogue about police brutality and misconduct.

    About 2:40 p.m., Gaines recorded another video of herself. She was holding the shotgun up near her chest, pointed forward. She checked behind her, cleared her throat and looked down at the gun's trigger. Her shoulders shook.

    "Hey Mommy, I don't want my milk," Kodi said, asking if he could put his glass in the kitchen.

    "No, I want you to stay right there for a second," Gaines said, still holding up the gun.

    At 2:45 p.m., police confirmed they had shut down power to Gaines' apartment. They discussed bringing in cooling stations for other residents who would be affected.

    As the afternoon wore on, police believed their negotiations were breaking down.

    "Is she still somewhat calm?" an officer asked over the radio at one point.

    "No, she is now mostly rambling, still about the previous arrest and the previous contact with us," another responded.

    "She knows we're not leaving, right?"

    "Yep."

    According to Robert W. Taylor, a criminology professor at University of Texas at Dallas and former police negotiator, Gaines' access to social media added "just another complexity to an already difficult situation."

    "When you have this outside line to Facebook and social media, it's just a compounding factor," he said. "You're only going to be able to control the media to a certain degree."

    Because of Kodi's presence, police had no choice but to remain at the apartment, he said.

    "The police are damned if they do and damned if they don't," he said.

    Shots fired

    At 3:21 p.m., Gaines had entered the kitchen of her apartment, according to a police timeline.

    Three minutes later, police noted that Gaines was "highly agitated" and "screaming at officers to get back."

    A minute later, they noted it appeared Gaines' Facebook and Instagram were down.

    Then, at 3:26 p.m., a voice came across the SWAT tactical channel: "Shots fired. Shots fired."

    Officer Royce Ruby Jr., who fired the fatal shots, said in a statement that the shooting happened after Gaines, who had been sitting on the floor within view of the officers through much of the day, suddenly ran into her kitchen.

    "This was a huge tactical advantage to her, giving the suspect a good angle to shoot at" officers stationed just outside of her open front door, Ruby wrote in the written statement given to police investigators the day after the shooting.

    The statement has not been made public before.

    Ruby, who also was outside Gaines' front door, wrote that he could see the muzzle of the shotgun and a piece of her hair at the entrance to the kitchen. Police commanded her to drop the gun.

    Then Ruby saw her gun "raising up and sticking further into the hallway," pointed at the officers positioned next to him, he wrote.

    Fearing for their lives, he fired "through the drywall at her head," he wrote. She then fired her shotgun for the first time, he wrote, but did not strike any officers.

    Ruby and the other officers then rushed in, trying to reach Gaines before she could pump the shotgun and fire again, he wrote.

    But Gaines did shoot again toward the officers approaching through the other kitchen entrance. Officers said they hoped to pull Kodi to safety.

    As Ruby rushed to Gaines, he wrote, he saw her turning the shotgun toward him. Ruby wrote that he was in fear for his life and the boy's life when he fired three more rounds at Gaines' "center mass," as Kodi "was moving from her side, to behind her and away."

    No other officers fired a weapon.

    Gordon, the Gaines family's attorney, said police should have waited Gaines out longer. Ruby should not have shot into the apartment, Gordon said — especially through a wall, when Kodi was there, next to his mother.

    According to her autopsy, Gaines was shot in the left chest, the left back, the right arm, and the left wrist and forearm, with an additional graze wound to the right thigh. Her son suffered a gunshot wound to the face that wasn't life-threatening.

    Baltimore County State's Attorney Scott Shellenberger said investigators believe the bullet that hit Kodi first passed through his mother.

    After the shooting, an officer asked over police radio whether Kodi could be brought to the family members waiting outside. Instead, he would be rushed to the hospital.
  • Cabana_Da_Don
    Cabana_Da_Don Members Posts: 7,992 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    I think there´s a secret society in the police force that run ? .