Man shot dead by L.A. deputies held onto gun
A black man shot to death by Los Angeles deputies refused to drop his gun and kept holding it even as he lay dying on the ground, officials say.
LOS ANGELES — A black man who was fatally shot by Los Angeles deputies kept holding a gun as he lay dying on the ground, authorities said Sunday in response to questions about why they continued to fire on the man after he fell to the pavement.
A close-up from security footage showed 28-year-old Nicholas Robertson stretched out on the ground with a gun in his hand. He died at the scene Saturday morning in the south Los Angeles suburb of Lynwood.
Two deputies fired 33 bullets at the man after he refused to drop the gun and walked across a busy street to a filling station where a family was pumping gas, homicide Cpt. Steven Katz said.
“When he collapsed, his arms were underneath him, and the gun was still in his hand. There was never a time when the weapon was not in his possession,” Katz said.
Katz estimated that the entire confrontation, from the time officers first ordered Robertson to drop the gun until the shooting was over, lasted about 30 seconds.
Asked if the officers were white, Katz said no but would not elaborate.
Police confronted Robertson as they investigated reports of a man firing a gun into the air. Witnesses said he was walking down a residential street and then through a busy commercial area holding the weapon and acting strangely.
Witnesses told authorities that Robertson fired six to seven rounds and briefly went into a car wash and a pizza parlor before deputies arrived.
Deputies spotted the man in front of the gas station, where two women and three children were inside a car, and ordered him to drop the gun, but he refused and at one point pointed the gun in the deputies’ direction, Katz said.
Video, apparently from a cellphone, was posted on several media sites. It appears to show deputies firing some two dozen bullets, including several rounds after Robertson falls and is crawling on the ground.
“They shot him in his shoulder, and he was crawling,” Pamela Brown, Robertson’s mother-inlaw, told Los Angeles television station KCAL. “He left three kids behind, two daughters and a son. What, they could have Tasered him or anything.”
The cellphone video is about 29 seconds. The sheriff’s security camera video, which doesn’t include all of the shooting and does include images of Robertson walking around, lasts about two minutes.
Based on 911 calls, Robertson had been walking around the two-block area with a gun in hand for about six minutes.