The police in Arlington, Texas, asked the FBI to help investigate the shooting death of an unarmed black college student who was killed by a police trainee early on Friday inside a car dealership.
Arlington Police Department Chief Will Johnson said the trainee, Brad Miller, 49, shot and killed Christian Taylor, a 19-year-old football player at Angelo State University in San Angelo, Texas, as he attempted to flee from officers who had been dispatched to the dealership after reports of a suspected burglary.
Johnson pledged “a transparent, thorough and fair investigation,” but warned that it might be “lengthy and at times frustratingly slow.”
Photo: AP
He said he had invited Thomas Class Sr., the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Dallas division, to participate.
“Our pledge is to provide answers in the most thorough and expeditious manner possible,” Johnson on Saturday night told a news conference.
He also included “an acknowledgment that this instance has not occurred in isolation but rather has occurred as our nation is grappling with the problems of social injustice, inequities, racism and police misconduct.”
Miller was placed on administrative leave pending the outcome of the investigation, Johnson said.
He said Miller had not yet been interviewed about the incident, a delay that Johnson described as “standard police practice.”
He told reporters that the department would release recordings of both the 911 call that preceded the incident and police radio traffic, but that it would not do so until the two officers at the shooting, Miller and his training officer, had submitted statements. He estimated that would take seven to 10 days.
Johnson said the police were called shortly after 1am on Friday to the Classic Buick GMC dealership, where they found Taylor “roaming freely” inside the showroom. A Jeep had crashed through the front window.
The officers ordered Taylor to lie down, and when he fled instead, they chased him. He was found trying to get out of the building through a locked glass door.
Johnson said that the two officers had struggled with Taylor and that Miller had fired four shots.
Taylor was struck multiple times, Johnson said, and was declared dead on the scene. Investigators later determined he had no weapon.
The training officer fired no shots. A Taser was also used against Taylor, but Johnson said the department had not determined which officer used it or in what sequence the two weapons were used.
Miller — in his first police job — has been with the Arlington Police Department since September last year and has been training in the field under the supervision of a more senior officer since he graduated from the police academy in March, according to a police statement.
Miller had no history of disciplinary action with the department.
The dealership released security camera footage of Taylor in its parking lot that prompted a security company to call the police.
The video, posted online by an NBC television affiliate, shows Taylor arriving at the dealership in a Jeep, punching the window of a gray sports car, kicking its windshield and jumping on its roof.
Later, Taylor can be seen driving his car through the parking lot’s closed gate. The police can soon be seen arriving, but the video shows no part of their interaction with Taylor.
In a statement released on Friday, the department said that its officers did not wear body cameras, but that it was in the process of starting a pilot program to experiment with their use.
Clyde Fuller, Taylor’s great-uncle, told the Star-Telegram of Fort Worth that Taylor was “a good kid” and that he did not believe the police account that Taylor had been committing a crime.
Taylor was a supporter of the #BlackLivesMatter movement and an avid user of social media, on which he repeatedly criticized the justice system and expressed fear of the police.
His death immediately became part of the debate, much of it online, over police use of deadly force in their dealings with African-Americans.
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