Autopsy disputing police account of Stephon Clark shooting sparks anger
SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Calls for justice and charges against two police officers who fatally shot an unarmed black man aren't abating in California's capital city after an autopsy showed Stephon Clark was shot in the back, a counter to the department's statement that he was approaching officers when he was killed. "His back was turned -- he didn't get a chance," said Latarria McCain, who joined several hundred people protesting downtown Friday, a larger crowd than those at three previous protests.
Sacramento native and former NBA player Matt Barnes has organized another rally for Saturday afternoon, hours before a Sacramento Kings-Golden State Warriors game will bring thousands of fans to the downtown arena that protesters have twice blocked.
Several Kings players joined black community activists' calls for racial justice at a Friday night community meeting, nearly two weeks after Clark's March 18 death.
"I want to make sure that these mistakes that keep happening have consequences," player Garrett Temple said.
Earlier, the famed pathologist Dr. Bennet Omalu announced Clark was hit by eight bullets -- seven times from behind -- and took three to 10 minutes to die. Each one of the bullets could have been fatal, Omalu said, and Clark's death was "not instantaneous."
Police waited about five minutes before rendering medical aid.
"The proposition that has been presented that he was assailing the officers, meaning he was facing the officers, is inconsistent with the prevailing forensic evidence," Omalu said at a news conference with family attorney Benjamin Crump.
He said it was not clear if Clark would have survived had he gotten immediate medical attention.
Sacramento police responded with a brief statement that said the department had not yet received an official autopsy report from the Sacramento County coroner's office. It said the coroner's death investigation is independent from the investigation being conducted by police and the state Department of Justice.
A day after the shooting, police distributed a press release that said the officers who shot Clark "saw the suspect facing them, advance forward with his arms extended, and holding an object in his hands."
Police video of the shooting doesn't clearly capture all that happened after Clark ran into his grandmother's backyard. He initially moved toward the officers, who are peeking out from behind a corner of the house, but it's not clear he's facing them or that he knows they are there when they open fire after shouting "gun, gun, gun."
After 20 shots, officers call to him, apparently believing he might still be alive and armed. They eventually approach and find no gun, just a cellphone.
"When a young man who is 22 is shot down in his grandma's backyard, which is supposed to be a safe place, I don't know. What's beyond a crisis?" said Nikki Whitfield, who works at a local adoption agency and attended the community forum.
With a joyous but somber feel, the event marked a change in tone from the protests that have disrupted the capital city's downtown. But the message was similar, with several hundred members of the black community discussing police brutality and calling out of the names of black people who have been killed by law enforcement.
Later downtown, protesters chanted outside City Hall before marching, with some briefly entering a downtown bar and chanting Clark's name.
Police handcuffed shut a downtown Sacramento hotel door to stop protesters from entering as they marched against Clark's killing. Capital Public Radio reported that protesters had a brief confrontation with police outside the hotel. The scuffle came during the fourth hour of theprotest that began at City Hall and continued through downtown streets blocking traffic.
The protest has largely remained peaceful, with leaders of Black Lives Matter Sacramento helping diffuse tensions. Protesters and the police had a brief standoff near a ramp onto the interstate before protesters went a different direction.
Gov. Jerry Brown issued his first statement on the situation Friday, calling it a tragic death that "raises a number of very serious questions and I support the California Attorney General's independent oversight of the investigation."
The autopsy was released a day after an emotional funeral service. Stevante Clark kissed his brother Stephon's casket next to a wreath saying "rest in power" before leading the congregation in the chant, "I am Stephon Clark."
The Rev. Al Sharpton delivered the eulogy and praised demonstrators for their restraint and urged them to follow the lead of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and his advocacy of nonviolent protest. Hundreds attended the funeral.
After the funeral, Clark family attorney Crump called for peace.
"Stephon Clark did not choose violence that night," Crump said. "We must choose nonviolence to make sure that we protest in our most productive way possible."
Lawyers for the family of Clark told CBS News they planned to file a federal lawsuit.