TechnologyLast

D.C. police release bodycam video showing fatal shooting of Deon Kay

Police in the nation's capital released video on Thursday from the body camera worn by an officer who fatally shot 18-year-old Deon Kay during a pursuit the previous day. The young Black man's killing quickly prompted angry protests in Washington D.C., with calls for the mayor to fire the Metropolitan Police chief and "defund" the department.

The video shows a brief and chaotic scene. As a police car pulls into the parking lot of a southeast Washington apartment complex, the officer jumps out and begins chasing someone. The officer turns around, sees Kay running a few feet behind him and fires a single shot into Kay's chest.

Police identified that officer as Alexander Alvarez, who joined the department in 2018. He has been placed on administrative leave.

The police video (WARNING: Graphic content) later freezes the frame and circles what appears to be a pistol in Kay's hand. But it's unclear whether Kay, who had officers in front and back of him, was intending to use the weapon or throw it away.

An image taken from officer body camera video released by the Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police shows Deon Kay, 18, holding an item identified by the police as a handgun moments before he's fatally shot by an officer during a pursuit on September 2, 2020.

Police handout

Immediately after the shooting, as other officers tend to Kay, the officer who fired the shot begins frantically looking for Kay's gun in the surrounding grass. The handgun was found about 98 feet away, a distance that Metropolitan Police Department chief Peter Newsham said "does seem like a long way to throw a weapon."

"Everyone can go and look at the video for themselves," Newsham said. "You can stop it frame by frame and make your own determination. We will do the same when we conduct our investigation."

The incident drew harsh condemnation from the American Civil Liberties Union, which blamed the MPD for an overly confrontational approach that creates dangerous and violent situations.

"The D.C. police department's approach to gun recovery has been dangerous and ineffective for years," said Monica Hopkins, head of the ACLU's District of Columbia office. "The tragic shooting and death of 18-year-old Deon Kay is the logical conclusion of a policy that not only meets violence with violence, but actually escalates and incites it - especially in our Black communities."

Hopkins called for an overhaul of D.C.'s approach to guns on the streets to "focus on non-police solutions that address the underlying roots of community violence instead of continuing aggressive police tactics."

Demonstrators are seen outside D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser's house on September 2, 2020 after a police officer shot and killed an 18-year-old. Protesters were demanding that Bowser fire Police Chief Newsham and defund the police.

WUSA-TV

The shooting occurred at a time of nationwide protests over police killings of Black people and calls for sweeping changes in policing.

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser said her administration had rushed to release the video "to help the public answer some questions. What I know is that our officer was trying to take guns off the street and what I know is that he encountered somebody with a gun."

Authorities did not release the video from other officers on the scene.

Emergency legislation passed by the D.C. Council in June requires the police to release any body camera footage from any fatal shootings or use-of-force incidents within five days. Newsham said his department worked overnight to make the footage public well ahead of that deadline,

"One of the reasons we put it out as quickly as we did is because there's a lot of misinformation in the current climate that we have — not only in Washington D.C., but across the country. Misinformation can lead to some disturbances in our city and that's the last thing we want to see," Newsham said.

District of Columbia Metropolitan Police Department Chief Peter Newsham speaks at a news conference as D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser stands near him, in a May 30, 2020 file photo taken in Washington.

Manuel Balce Ceneta/AP

Newsham described Kay as a "validated gang member" who had multiple run-ins with local law enforcement, although the chief he refused to got into specifics. He said officers were drawn to the area by a video posted on social media that showed two young Black men, one wearing a mask, showing off handguns inside a car.

"They knew Mr. Kay when they saw the livestream. They knew him by name," Newsham said. "I know that he's a validated gang member from the area and I know that he's had multiple touches with the criminal justice system. ... I'm pretty sure that Deon Kay fell through multiple safety nets before yesterday afternoon."

The U.S. attorney's office will conduct an independent review of the shooting.

The local Black Lives Matter affiliate called for protests outside the Metropolitan Police's 7th District headquarters immediately after the shooting, saying in a tweet: "DC police murdered a Black man today."

Later Wednesday night, videos posted on social media showed dozens of enraged protesters jostling with a line of police officers, who used bicycles to help form a barrier in front of the station.