VIDEO: Stand By Your Man? Not So Fast
The Los Angeles Police Protective League is calling out LAPD Chief Charlie Beck for his comments about a deadly officer-involved shooting in Venice.
The shooting occurred near Pacific and Winward avenues near the beach late Tuesday night. An unarmed transient man, identified as 29-year-old Brendon Glenn, was shot and killed by an LAPD officer who was responding to a call about someone “disturbing the peace.”
“The cop said, ‘Put up your hands’ or something like that. ‘Show me your I.D.’ And he went into his back pocket to pull out his I.D. and they shot him,” said Paris Edwards of Venice. “They thought he had a knife or a gun. He had nothing. He had no gun, no knife, and he was dead in the street.”
After viewing surveillance video of the shooting, Beck raised questions about the need for deadly force.
“Anytime an unarmed person is shot by a Los Angeles police officer, it takes extraordinary circumstances to justify that. I have not seen those extraordinary circumstances at this point,” Beck said at a Wednesday press conference.
The chief’s comments have angered the LAPPL, a union that represents police officers. The league said it’s too early to suggest the shooting was improper. The union released the following statement:
“It is completely irresponsible for anyone, much less the Chief of Police, to render a judgement on an incident that is in early stages of investigation. As the final trier of fact in the use-of-force investigation and disciplinary process, the premature decision by the chief essentially renders the investigation process void. Additionally, by making his opinion public without having all of the facts, he influences the investigation for all parties involved, including his command officers and the public. As in the criminal justice system, everyone is innocent until proven guilty. We encourage everyone to reserve judgment until the investigation has run its course, and the facts are collected and assessed.”