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Florida police shoot black man lying down with arms in air Florida police shoot black man lying down with arms in air
(about 5 hours later)
An autistic man’s therapist was shot and wounded by police in Florida while lying on the street with his hands in the air. While lying on his back in the street with his arms in the air, Charles Kinsey told police that he was a behavioral therapist caring for the autistic patient who sat next to him. Despite this, Kinsey left the scene with a police-inflicted gunshot wound to the leg.
Charles Kinsey, who works with people with disabilities, was trying to get his 27-year-old patient back to a facility from where he wandered, North Miami assistant police chief Neal Cuevas told the Miami Herald. Footage released late on Wednesday by Kinsey’s lawyer, shows him, an unarmed black man, on his back while his patient plays with a toy truck in the moments before an officer opened fire, wounding Kinsey in the leg. The shooting was yet another incident which exposed the fault lines between police and communities of color in the US.
Cuevas said police who were responding to reports of a man threatening to shoot himself ordered Kinsey and the patient, who was sitting in the street playing with a toy truck, to lie on the ground. That tension, which was brought to the fore after Missouri police fatally shot the unarmed, black 18-year-old Michael Brown in August 2014, has again been exacerbated by the high-profile police killings of black men earlier this month and the fatal shootings of police officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge that followed.
Kinsey, who is black, lay down and put his hands up while trying to get his patient to comply. An officer fired three times, striking Kinsey in the leg, Cuevas said. No weapon was found on either Kinsey or his patient. Monday’s shooting in North Miami inspired outrage three days later with the release of the cellphone video footage, which does not show the moment when the officer fired three shots towards Kinsey and his patient. The name of the patient has not been released and it is unclear why the two men were in the street at all.
A lawyer for Kinsey, Hilton Napoleon, gave the Herald a video showing the moments leading up to the shooting. It shows Kinsey lying in the middle of the street with his hands up, asking the officers not to shoot him, while his patient sits next to him, yelling at him to “shut up”. Kinsey can be heard on the video telling police that the only thing the patient has in his hands is the toy. “A toy truck,” Kinsey told the officers. “I am a behavior therapist at the group home. That’s all it is.”
“Sir, there’s no need for firearms,” Kinsey said he told police before he was shot, according to the paper. “It was so surprising. It was like a mosquito bite.” A few seconds later, the camera swerves to show an officer hiding behind a pole with his gun raised, but footage of the actual shooting has not been released. The video also shows both men on the ground surrounded by officers.
Police have not released the name of the officer who fired the shots. North Miami police said they responded to the scene on Monday after receiving a 911 call about an armed man threatening to shoot himself.
Department spokeswoman Natalie Buissereth said in a statement that “arriving officers attempted to negotiate with the two men on the scene, one of whom was later identified as suffering from autism … At some point during the on-scene negotiation, one of the responding officers discharged his weapon.”
The officer who fired the weapon has not been named and has been placed on administrative leave in keeping with standard protocol.
The Miami-Dade state attorney’s office has opened an investigation into the shooting in conjunction with the Florida department of law enforcement.
Neither Kinsey nor the patient were found to have a weapon.
Kinsey’s lawyer, Hilton Napoleon, released the video on Wednesday night and said he was negotiating a possible settlement with the city.
“They realize this was something inappropriate regarding the shooting,” Napoleon told the Miami Herald. He said that if police departments admitted their fault in incidents like this more often, “it would probably go a long way” toward improving relations with the public.
Kinsey, who was not seriously wounded and was expected to go home on Thursday, told local news station WSVN that he asked the officer why he shot at him. Kinsey said: “His words were, ‘I don’t know.’”
“I was really more worried about him [the patient] more than myself because … once I’ve got my hands up they’re not going to shoot me, this is what I’m thinking, they’re not going to shoot me,” Kinsey said. “Wow, was I wrong.”
Clint Bower, who runs the group home where Kinsey has worked for more than a year, told Local 10 News that the man Kinsey was caring for is non-verbal and has “relatively low function”.
The incident has further outraged a country torn by a rash of violence between police and the public. Eight police officers were killed in July in Dallas and Baton Rouge after the police shootings of two black men were captured on camera earlier this month.
Just over a week before three officers were killed in Baton Rouge on Sunday, Barack Obama responded to questions about police and race in a town hall meeting. The president offered support to protesters and police, trying to be conciliatory while facing questions from law enforcement and the relatives of those who had been killed by police officers.
“What is true for a lot of African American men is there’s a greater presumption of dangerousness that arises from the social and cultural perceptions that have been fed to folks for a long time,” Obama said, then adding, “but black folks and Latino folks also carry some assumptions. You may see a police officer who’s doing everything right, and you already assumed the worst rather than the best in him, and we have to guard against that as well.”