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Thread: Sean Monterrosa (22) Killed by Vallejo Polce

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    Sean Monterrosa (22) Killed by Vallejo Polce

    https://www.ktvu.com/news/vallejo-po...hammer-for-gun

    VALLEJO, Calif. - The Vallejo police department shot and killed a 22-year-old San Francisco man early Tuesday morning suspected of looting. The victim, identified as Sean Monterrosa, had a hammer in his waist that police say they thought was a gun.

    The incident unfolded outside of the Walgreens store on Redwood Street and Broadway. Officers who responded were returning to the store for the third time in about a two-hour timespan.

    Officers in an unmarked police vehicle reported that some of the suspected looters were leaving in multiple vehicles. The second vehicle leaving rammed a responding unit, injuring the officer and disabling the police cruiser.

    Vallejo police chief Shawny Williams said a looting suspect, later identified as Monterrosa, was seen with the hammer in his pants. Monterrosa had his hands above his waist, according to Williams.

    An officer inside of a police vehicle shot his service weapon five times at Monterrosa through the windshield. Monterrosa was struck once.

    Williams made a point to lay out Monterrocondsa's criminal history, including prior shoplifting arrests, but did not condemn the actions of the officer who mistook the hammer for a gun.

    While the Tuesday night protests around the Bay Area were mostly peaceful, community frustrations in Vallejo remained high. The Vallejo police department called in multiple outside agencies Tuesday night to assist with the unrest.

    Williams did not identify the officer who shot and killed the 22-year-old. He did say he was an 18-year veteran of the department.

    "I would say it's always a tragedy when an officer has to use force," said Williams. "The officers reacted to a perceived threat," he continued.

    Members of the community expressed their outrage at the chief, who wouldn't answer if the officer's actions were excessive, before concluding the press conference.

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    Senior Member curiouscat's Avatar
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    This is why I don't go out.
    I don't want to get shot.
    Quote Originally Posted by Boston Babe 73 View Post
    I don't have a thousand dollars hanging around to buy a fart in a jar lol.

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    https://abc7news.com/state-to-review...d-man/6234431/

    ABC7 News I-TEAM reporter Melanie Woodrow asked Chief Williams during a press conference Wednesday what the rules are for Vallejo Police Department in terms of firing through a vehicle's windshield.

    "The officers that are part of the crime reduction team are SWAT operators. It's a practice that they practice. It's basically the rules of law apply to when you're defending yourself. If there is a threat, a credible threat you can respond to that but they do train to shoot that way," said Chief Williams.

    Chief Williams said it is allowed within the department.

    It's a practice that may be scrutinized now. The California Attorney General has announced an agreement with the City of Vallejo and the Vallejo Police Department to collaborate on a comprehensive policing plan to reform Vallejo Police Department's policies and practices as well as increase public trust.

    "Whatever's in the dark will come to light. I know Vallejo PD is trying to cover something up more," said Michelle Monterrosa, Sean's sister.

    The review promises improvements in use-of-force procedures, anti-bias and community policing, and accountability.

    Chief Williams was asked but would not give the officer's name. He said the department has 45 days to release body worn camera video and would do so even sooner.


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    https://abc7news.com/family-of-man-k...eased/6251534/

    VALLEJO, Calif. (KGO) -- Pressure is building in Vallejo for the police department to release the body cam video of the recent shooting and killing of 22-year-old Sean Monterrosa.

    Police responded to a looting call at Walgreens earlier this month. Monterrosa appeared to be running to a getaway vehicle, then stopped, got on his knees, and put his hands above his waist.

    He was fatally shot a short time later. Officers say they thought he had a gun, but it was actually a hammer.

    "Release the footage, release the footage for sure and stop hiding," says Michelle Monterrosa, who is Sean's older sister. His younger sister is speaking up as well, saying "Why they probably don't want to release the footage is because they know they messed up and there is no justification for executing my brother at this point."

    In a rare move San Francisco supervisors passed a resolution urging Vallejo to release that body camera video.

    "The chief made these statements that Monterrosa was in a certain position and we want to see if that is true or not particularly in light that the police association has attempted to contradict that," says John Burris who represents Monterrosa's family.

    The police union has now filed for a restraining order to block the release of the officer's name who fired the shot.

    As all this is happening, Touro University in Vallejo has announced they will no longer be allowing the Vallejo Police Department to train on their campus.

    Not a shock says Burris, "There is a 22-year-old kid who is now dead who appeared to be surrendering and he is shot down in cold blood."

    In a City of Vallejo special meeting Tuesday night to discuss police reform, there was little to no talk of the Sean Monterrosa shooting outside of the public comments.

    Sean's sister's say they want justice, "This is a black and brown issue. You know we're tired of police murdering us, it's time to have some accountability."

    The City of Vallejo did tweet that they oppose the Vallejo Police Association's filing to keep the name of the officer private. They are in favor of releasing the name.

    There is a court hearing on this matter later this summer.

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    https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/loca...royed/2326285/

    Sean Monterrosa’s sisters fear officials destroyed evidence after finding out that Vallejo police and city attorneys failed to preserve evidence in their brother’s killing.

    “Just when you think it’s just horrible it gets worse,” said sister Ashley Monterrosa.

    She and sister Michelle Monterrosa are angry but not surprised that the city of Vallejo can not provide crucial evidence left behind in their brother'’ fatal shooting by a police officer.

    "We’re more angry now it was a key evidence of Sean’s murder," said Michelle.

    Last week, Vallejo police released body cam video of the shooting. It was controversial because the video that was released didn’t show what happened before the deadly shooting. The body cam video was turned on after the officer shot and killed Monterrosa.

    "After watching the video last week we wanted to make sure they understood that we expected them to preserve the truck that officer Tonn was shooting out of and the drone,” said attorney Melissa Nold.

    In an email Tuesday, the deputy city attorney wrote that her office checked with the police department and she was told that the truck officers were in, was repaired and put back in service. Bullet riddled windshield was replaced and taken away by the repair company.

    “Now the evidence is gone forever,” said Nold. “Once they put that truck back into service we’ll never know the condition it was in that night.”

    Jerry Threet is a police oversight professional and former San Francisco deputy city attorney and he’s worked in the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

    “When you have a killing by a Vallejo Police Department officer you would anticipate that there might be a lawsuit ,” he said. “That should instruct them to preserve evidence and the fact that that evidence was not perceived, is really troubling.”

    NBC Bay Area reached out to Vallejo's police chief and the city attorney’s office regarding the evidence in the Monterrosa killing but have not heard back.

    “It goes to prove that police departments shouldn’t be investigating themselves,” Ashley said.


    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/...police-killing


    Body-camera footage of the deadly police shooting of Sean Monterrosa has raised new questions about why a Vallejo officer fired bullets from inside his vehicle at the unarmed 22-year-old.

    The 2 June killing in the small city north of San Francisco took place outside a Walgreens amid national protests over the police killing of George Floyd. Vallejo officers were responding to a call about looting after midnight when one officer, identified by local reporters as Detective Jarrett Tonn, drove up and fired through the windshield of his unmarked car. After the shooting, the city’s police chief said Monterrosa was on his knees with his hands raised, and that he had a hammer in his pocket.

    The killing of the beloved San Francisco native sparked outrage across the country, and the body-camera footage released on Wednesday has raised more questions than it answers.

    The footage does not show Monterrosa before he was killed or his position while he was shot, but it captures the moment of the shooting from inside the police car, and the aftermath. The footage, released more than a month after the killing, shows:

    The officer fired the shots from inside his car before he had fully stopped his vehicle.
    In the seconds after the shooting, two officers questioned whether Monterrosa was armed, one saying: “What did he point at us?” and the other responding: “I don’t know.”
    After the shooting, an officer suggested that Monterrosa was fleeing, saying: “He ran, he ran!”
    An officer had multiple outbursts after the killing, shouting: “This is not what I fucking needed today!” and “Stupid!”
    The footage makes clear there was “no de-escalation” and “no justification” for lethal force, said John Burris, the family’s attorney.

    “He was never given a chance. He was just shot,” Burris told the Guardian after he watched the video with Monterrosa’s sisters and father, before police publicly released it. “There was no consideration for this person’s life.”

    The footage was released after weeks of pressure from attorneys, lawmakers and advocates. The killing has renewed scrutiny on Vallejo, a Bay Area city where police are known for killing and brutalizing citizens at a high rate without consequence. Vallejo police have refused to confirm the name of the officer who fired the fatal shots, but Open Vallejo and the Bay Area News Group have identified the shooter as Tonn.
    Tonn has been involved in four shootings in five years and is one of 14 Vallejo policemen whom residents call the “Fatal 14” – officers who have repeatedly shot and killed civilians.

    At one point in the minutes after the shooting of Monterrosa, the body-camera footage captured another officer trying to calm Tonn, saying, “You’ll be all right. Take some deep breaths. You’ve been through this before.”

    Once the cameras were turned on, the officers started remarking to each other that they thought Monterrosa was armed with a gun. Burris said the conversation suggested some were doubting the justification for lethal force.

    Burris said he was especially disturbed to learn that the officer did not turn on his camera before the shooting, and noted that police officials have continued to shift their narrative of what happened. Days after the shooting, Shawny Williams, the Vallejo police chief, told reporters that Monterrosa was kneeling with his hands raised and that the officer mistakenly thought he had a gun, and later discovered it was a hammer in his pocket.

    But the police union, which represents the officer, later claimed Monterrosa was “crouched into a tactical shooting position” and “grabbed an object” that appeared to be the butt of handgun, saying: “The officer used deadly force as a last resort because he had no other reasonable option to prevent getting shot.”

    “The Vallejo police union concocted a different scenario once they knew there was no tape,” Burris said. “This is what happens with police departments and in Vallejo.”

    Melissa Nold, another attorney for the family, noted that Vallejo officers who kill often return to work weeks after the shooting. She said she didn’t know the status of Detective Tonn, but said it would not be safe for him to return to the streets given the killing of Monterrosa and his long record of shootings: “I hope they don’t ever put him back on patrol.”

    A Vallejo police spokeswoman, Brittany Jackson, declined to answer questions about Tonn. Asked about the claims that the department had changed its story, Jackson said the chief had “issued clarifying statements” after comments from his original press conference were “misconstrued”.

    Before Monterrosa, Vallejo police killed Willie McCoy, a 20-year-old who had been sleeping in his car when six officers fired 55 bullets in 3.5 seconds. One of those officers had previously killed an unarmed man who was fleeing on his bike. Another officer was promoted after he killed three men in a five-month period.

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    https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/loca...oting/2328222/

    House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is joining Vallejo city officials in calling for an FBI investigation into the police shooting that killed Sean Monterrosa.

    Pelosi's announcement Friday comes days after Vallejo city officials requested a criminal investigation into the destruction of evidence pertaining to the deadly police shooting.

    “The police killing of Sean Monterrosa was a horrible act of brutality that continues to shake our Bay Area community," Pelosi said in a statement. "Recent reports that key evidence in the investigation was destroyed are deeply disturbing and highlight the urgency and necessity of an outside, independent federal investigation."

    A request for a criminal investigation by the Solano County District Attorney’s Office, Attorney General Xavier Becerra’s office and the FBI was already in progress, but the city requested the destruction of evidence also be included in their investigation.

    Vallejo city officials also said an employee has been placed on administrative leave.

    “I join Sean’s family, Vallejo city officials and community members in calling for an FBI investigation into Sean’s murder, including into the destruction of essential evidence in this homicide case. We must insist on justice and accountability to honor Sean’s life and the lives of all killed by police brutality in America. Sean’s killing highlights the urgent need for the Senate to pass the House-passed George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which will fundamentally transform the culture of policing in America as it saves lives," Pelosi said.

    “May Sean’s memory be a source of strength to all as we seek justice in his name. May it be a comfort to his family and loved ones that so many in our city mourn with and pray for them during this devastating time.”

    Last week, Vallejo police released body cam video of the shooting. The video that was released did not show what happened before the deadly shooting. The body cam video was turned on after the officer shot and killed Monterrosa.

    Monterrosa, a 22-year-old man from San Francisco was fatally shot by police in Vallejo on June 2 as officers tried to stop looters during protests over the death of George Floyd.

    Vallejo police said Monterrosa started running toward a car that just rammed into a police unit.

    Police have said the detective, an 18-year veteran of the department, opened fire because he believed Monterrosa was reaching for the butt of a handgun near his waistband. After the shooting, officers discovered he had a 15-inch hammer in the front pocket of his sweatshirt and did not have a firearm.
    The city of Vallejo needs to not drop the ball on this one given that they are getting national attention for crazy reasons here.

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