Sheriff’s Report: No Evidence Tamir Rice Shooter Told Boy To Put His Hands Up Before Opening Fire

CORRECTS THE ID OF THE MALE ON POSTER TO TAMIR RICE - Tomiko Shine holds up a picture of Tamir Rice, the 12 year old boy fatally shot on Nov. 22 by a rookie police officer, during a protest in response to a grand jur... CORRECTS THE ID OF THE MALE ON POSTER TO TAMIR RICE - Tomiko Shine holds up a picture of Tamir Rice, the 12 year old boy fatally shot on Nov. 22 by a rookie police officer, during a protest in response to a grand jury's decision in Ferguson, Mo. to not indict police officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown, an unarmed black man, at the Department of Justice in Washington, Monday, Dec. 1, 2014. Protesters across the U.S. have walked off their jobs or away from classes in support of the Ferguson protesters. Rice's death has also sparked community demonstrations against police shootings. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) MORE LESS
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Updated June 13, 2015, 6:57 p.m.

CLEVELAND (AP) — Investigators have found no hard evidence a Cleveland police officer who fatally shot a 12-year-old boy carrying a pellet gun ordered him to raise his hands before opening fire.

Documents released Saturday by the prosecutor handling the racially charged case detail the moments before the brief, deadly encounter — and how the responding officers seemed almost shell-shocked as Tamir Rice lay dying outside a rec center.

Cleveland police have said the officer who fired the fatal shot, Timothy Loehmann, told Tamir three times to put his hands up, then opened fire when the boy reached for the pellet gun tucked in his waistband.

Grainy, choppy surveillance video shows Loehmann firing two shots within two seconds of his police cruiser skidding to a stop near the boy. Cuyahoga County sheriff’s detectives investigating the shooting wrote that, based on witness interviews, it was unclear if Loehmann shouted anything to Tamir from inside the cruiser before opening fire.

Tamir’s death is among a series of cases involving the use of deadly force on black suspects that sparked protests and outrage across the country. Tamir was black, the officers are white.

Prosecutor Tim McGinty has said the case, as with all police-involved shootings, will be taken to grand jury to determine whether criminal charges should be filed against Loehmann or his partner, Frank Garmback. McGinty said he decided to release the investigative file now in the interests of transparency.

“If we wait years for all litigation to be completed before the citizens are allowed to know what actually happened, we will have squandered our best opportunity to institute needed changes in use of force policy, police training and leadership,” McGinty said.

A friend told deputies he had given the pellet gun to Tamir hours before the shooting with the warning to be careful because it looked real, according to the documents.

The friend told sheriff’s deputies he had given the airsoft-type gun to him on the morning of Nov. 22 in exchange for one of the boy’s cellphones and planned to get it back later that day. The friend said he had taken the gun apart to fix it and been unable to reattach the orange cap that goes on the barrel to indicate it isn’t the .45-caliber handgun it’s modeled after.

Investigators were told that Tamir used the airsoft gun, which shoots non-lethal plastic projectiles, to shoot at car tires that day.

Loehmann and Garmback were responding to a call about a young man waving and pointing a gun outside the rec center. A 911 caller had also said the gun might be a fake and the man could be a juvenile, but that information was never relayed to the officers.

The surveillance video appears to show Tamir reaching for the pellet gun, which is tucked in his waistband, when he’s shot. Investigative documents said it’s been estimated that Loehmann fired twice at a range estimated at between 41/2 and 7 feet. Autopsy records indicate Tamir was struck only once.

An FBI agent who is a trained paramedic was on a bank robbery detail nearby. He began administering first aid four minutes after the shooting. The agent, whose name is redacted from the files, told investigators that Tamir’s wound was severe but he was still initially conscious. Tamir, he said, showed a response when he told him he was there to help.

Loehmann, 26, and Garmback, 47, have been criticized for not giving Tamir first aid. The officers seemed to freeze, the agent said.

“They wanted to do something, but they didn’t know what to do,” the agent told investigators.

The agent said Tamir answered when he asked him his name and said something about his gun. When Tamir became unresponsive, the agent called out for assistance to keep the boy’s airway open. He told investigators he believed it was Garmback who provided help. Loehmann, who had sprained his ankle while falling back after the shooting, was described as distraught by the agent, according to the documents.

Tamir died on the operating table early the next morning.

Loehmann’s attorney, Henry Hilow, said he has not had a chance to read the investigative file and said the officer committed no wrongdoing.

“The events were a tragedy, but there was no crime committed,” he said.

The agent guessed that Tamir, who was 5-foot-7 and weighed 195 pounds, was an “older teenager.” Police officers at the scene shared the same belief.

While Tamir might have been big for his age, those who knew him told investigators that he carried himself like the 12-year-old he was. The sixth-grader was in a special education class of six children at his elementary school, prone to exaggeration and sometimes picked on by other children at the recreation center, the investigative documents say.

A federal judge on Friday approved an agreement forged between the city of Cleveland and U.S. Department of Justice aimed at reforming the city’s police department, which the DOJ concluded after an 18-month investigation had shown a pattern and practice of using excessive force and violating people’s civil rights.

Copyright 2015 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Sucks when there is video to prove you are executing people and lie to cover your hate filled fucking executioners, eh?

  2. Officers were “shell-shocked”? Usually that adjective is reserved for people who’ve actually been shot at rather than the people doing the shooting. Sorry, gunhappy shoot-first-ask-questions-later police and your FBI agent enabler, I’m not buying your victim narrative.

  3. Loehmann's attorney, Henry Hilow, said he has not had a chance to read the investigative file and said the officer committed no wrongdoing.
    
    "The events were a tragedy, but there was no crime committed," he said.
    

    That’s the neat thing about being an attorney. You can lie with impunity.

  4. I hate AP articles. I really hate what they’ve become. The first paragraph…Why preface the article with this cleverly injected tidbit for the article?:

    CLEVELAND (AP) — Hours before a 12-year-old boy was fatally shot by a Cleveland police officer, the friend who had loaned Tamir Rice a pellet gun warned him to be careful because it looked real.

    No one is quoted. No one is identified having said this, and even if he/she had…what fucking purpose is it to put that at the top of the article to prejudice the reader before any straightforward facts are offered in this article? Are they suggesting 12 year old Tamir should have known better, or that he was responsible for his own death because someone supposedly warned him how his toy gun looked? WTF. I almost can’t read beyond that. How long did these cops wait to come out with anything on this investigation??? That should have been the first goshdamn paragraph of this article. What took them so long…not what excuse did they give. This is bullshit.

  5. Would you prefer “stunned”? It happens to all manner of people in all manner of stressful situations.

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