Bleeding and in handcuffs in a dark Chandler park, 17-year-old Anthony Cano explained that he d tried to toss the gun he was carrying so he wouldn t get shot.
The officer who shot him twice in the back, Chase Bebak-Miller, told the boy his action had been stupid. As Bebak-Miller explained to him, and later, to investigators, he thought Cano was pulling the gun on him.
The exchange was one of the new details found in a report released by Chandler police last week regarding the controversial January 2 shooting. The report also states that the boy flashed a gang sign and displayed his stolen firearm on Snapchat in the hours before the fatal shooting. Police released those photos to
White Co. man fatally wounded in officer-involved shooting A White County man died Saturday night after state investigators say he pointed a shotgun at a police officer and a deputy. (Source: WALB) By Region 8 Newsdesk | March 14, 2021 at 2:32 PM CDT - Updated March 14 at 3:27 PM
LONOKE COUNTY, Ark. (KAIT) - A White County man died Saturday night after state investigators say he pointed a shotgun at a police officer and a deputy.
According to Arkansas State Police, the incident happened around 10:30 p.m. March 13 outside of a home in Austin.
Lonoke County sheriff’s deputies and Austin police had been searching for 24-year-old Dustin Black after he reportedly shot at a woman on Seminole Circle around 8 p.m.
AP Photo/Jeff Roberson
The Omaha Police Department is releasing information late today regarding the Friday shooting of a police officer by Kenya Jenkins, a 21-year-old black male.
The stupidity of this incident that could have easily taken the officer’s life cannot be overemphasized.
Jenkins was detained by store security at a JC Penny Department store on suspicion of having put a package of white tee-shirts in his backpack. A single Omaha Police Officer responded to the call.
When Jenkins was asked by the officer to stand up and take off his backpack, Jenkins stood and put his right hand inside the front pocket of his hoody sweatshirt. He was told by the officer several times to remove his hand from inside the front pocket but refused to follow the instruction. He then became uncooperative and combative when the officer tried to put him in handcuffs. The officer drew his taser to use in attempting to subdue Jenkins.
West Valley City officer found not justified in what is his fourth shooting in seven years
Sgt. Jason Vincent fired at, but missed, Damien Evans as the man ran from police.
(Rick Egan | The Salt Lake Tribune) Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill walks through the findings of the Officer Involved Critical Incident Protocol in the use of Deadly Force by VFAST as a federal task force was searching for Damien Evans to serve an arrest warrant after he violated his parole last summer, during a news conference, on Friday, March 12, 2021. | Updated: March 13, 2021, 2:18 a.m.
Damien Evans had narrowly avoided being hit by three cars as he sprinted from swarming officers through a nearly empty Salt Lake City parking lot one sunny afternoon last August. The officers were trying to arrest him for a parole violation, but Evans didn’t want to go back to jail.