Family of slain black man wants police to release full video

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Pamela Benge (center) speaks about her son, Alfred Olango, at a press conference on Thursday, Sept. 29, 2016, in San Diego, California. Olango, a Ugandan refugee, was shot by an El Cajon police officer on Tuesday. In an emotional appearance before reporters, Benge said her son Alfred was joyful and loving. | Don Boomer/AP

EL CAJON, Calif. — An unarmed black man fatally shot by an officer in a San Diego suburb was unjustly killed and the police department and chief prosecutor are trying to sway public opinion by only releasing a single, favorable frame from video of the shooting, representatives of the man’s family said Thursday in demanding the full video be shown.

After two nights of angry protests in El Cajon, where the shooting occurred Tuesday afternoon, Alfred Olango’s family gathered with lawyers and religious leaders and urged people to continue demonstrating, but they implored them to protest peacefully to honor his memory.

Olango’s anguished mother said her son was a good, joyful man who suffered a “mental breakdown” over the recent death of his best friend and he needed compassion when police encountered him.

Alfred Olango | Olango Family via AP

Alfred Olango | Olango Family via AP

Pamela Benge said her family had escaped war-torn Uganda to come to the U.S. for safety, and she asked why police didn’t just shock her son with a stun gun or shoot him in the leg.

“He needed someone who was going to calm him down and then take care of the situation,” she said, her voice thick with emotion and dark glasses covering her eyes. “Not to come and just finish his life.”

Olango’s sister had called police three times Tuesday to report that he was sick, “not acting like himself,” and was walking in traffic. It took officers more than an hour to respond. Once they arrived, the shooting took place within about a minute.

Police released a still frame from a bystander’s video that showed Olango, 38, with his hands together at chest level and pointed at an officer directly in front of him. Police Chief Jeff Davis said Olango refused to obey orders to remove a hand from his pants pocket and was shot after he swiftly drew an object from his front pocket and pointed at the officer in a “shooting stance.”

The object turned out to be a 4-inch electronic cigarette, known as a vape pen.

A lawyer representing Olango’s family said at a news conference that authorities were misinforming the public by only showing a single image from the video that supports the El Cajon Police Department’s version of events.

“It’s a wonderful way if you’re litigating a case in the media,” attorney Dan Gilleon said. “It fits a perfect narrative for them.”

In this frame from a video provided by the El Cajon Police Department, Alfred Olango (second from left) faces police officers in El Cajon, California, on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2016. He was acting erratically at a strip mall in suburban San Diego and was fata

In this frame from a video provided by the El Cajon Police Department, Alfred Olango (second from left) faces police officers in El Cajon, California, on Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2016. He was acting erratically at a strip mall in suburban San Diego and was fatally shot by police after pulling an object from his pocket, pointing it at officers and assuming a “shooting stance,” authorities said. | El Cajon Police Department via AP
Tuesday, Sept. 27, 2016

The El Cajon mayor defended the decision to release the single frame, saying it accurately represented the situation the two officers faced.

“I thought it was way too incendiary to not release something,” Mayor Bill Wells said.

Wells said he reached that decision with the police chief and District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis to release the image to counter reports from people saying Olango had his hands in the air and was begging not to be shot. Wells said the video footage did not show either of those things.

Wells said he met with leaders of the black community on Thursday who told him releasing the video immediately could help prevent violence. Wells said he wanted to talk to the district attorney to discuss why the video should not be released immediately.

The San Diego district attorney’s office, which controls when videos of officer-involved shootings are released, said there is no time frame for when it will release the video.

The fatal shooting happened less than two weeks after black men were shot and killed by police in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Charlotte, North Carolina, where violent protests broke out.

Police in both those cities have released videos of the shootings. A Tulsa officer was charged with manslaughter in the fatal shooting of a motorist.

Olango arrived as a refugee in 1991 and was twice ordered deported because of a 2001 conviction for selling cocaine, U.S. immigration authorities said.

But he was released from detention after his native Uganda refused to take him. A U.S. Supreme Court ruling bars detention of foreign nationals after six months if deportation is unlikely.

Demonstrators yell at police during a protest on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2016, in El Cajon, California. Dozens of demonstrators were protesting the killing of Alfred Olango, a Ugandan refugee fatally shot by an officer. | Julie Watson/AP

Demonstrators yell at police during a protest on Wednesday, Sept. 28, 2016, in El Cajon, California. Dozens of demonstrators were protesting the killing of Alfred Olango, a Ugandan refugee fatally shot by an officer. | Julie Watson/AP

Immigration authorities took Olango into custody in 2009 after he served nearly four years for a federal firearms conviction in Colorado but were again unable to obtain travel documents.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement said Olango stopped reporting to officers in February 2015. Spokeswoman Virginia Kice did not know if officers tried to find him after that.

Olango’s mother said the family came to the U.S. as refugees and she just wanted them to have a better, safer life.

“I wanted the children not to be running around, being in fear every night, sleeping in the bush,” she said. “I thought a lovely, nice country like this would protect us.”

She said she had grieved and prayed for other parents who had lost children in recent shootings by police in the U.S., but “didn’t know that the next time it would be me.” She now understands their suffering.

“There is nothing as painful,” she said as family members stood nearby wiping tears from their eyes. “It is so much that you cannot swallow it. You try to swallow it, but the pain overweighs you. It is so bitter.”

Melley reported from Los Angeles. Associated Press writers Amy Taxin, Elliot Spagat, Andrew Dalton and John Antczak contributed to this report.

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