By Michael Kunzelman
Associated Press
BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — The children of a black man gunned down by a white police officer in Louisiana’s capital sued the city on Tuesday, claiming that the shooting fit a pattern of racist behavior and excessive force by its police department.
Attorneys for Alton Sterling’s five children filed the wrongful death lawsuit in state court against the city of Baton Rouge, its police department and police chief and the two officers involved in last summer's deadly encounter.
Officer Blane Salamoni shot Sterling six times during a struggle outside a convenience store where the 37-year-old black man was selling homemade CDs.
The Justice Department investigated Sterling’s shooting and announced last month that it will not file charges against Salamoni or Officer Howie Lake II, who also wrestled Sterling to the ground but didn’t fire his gun.
Louisiana Attorney General Jeff Landry’s office has opened its own review of the case to determine if any state criminal charges are warranted.
The family’s lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages, claims Sterling's shooting was the product of poor training and inadequate police procedures.
The suit also cites two instances in which Baton Rouge police officers allegedly sent racist text messages to colleagues, including an apparent slur against people who protested Sterling’s death.
“The City of Baton Rouge has a long standing pervasive policy of tolerating racist behavior by some of its officers,” the suit says. “There have also been multiple verbal racist comments by officers reported to the department. This tolerance of such behavior directly leads to the mistreatment of individuals of African American descent.”
Plaintiffs’ attorney L. Chris Stewart said he expects current and former police officers to come forward, testify under oath and back up “everything” alleged in the suit.
“This isn’t just lawyers talking and arguing. We have talked to officers who have said something is wrong and it must stop,” Stewart said.
Two cellphone videos of the July 5 shooting quickly spread on social media, setting off nightly protests. The officers’ body cameras and a store surveillance camera also recorded the encounter, but those videos have not been publicly released.
Federal investigators found that Salamoni shot Sterling three times after saying that Sterling was reaching for a gun in his pocket, and fired three more shots into Sterling’s back when he began to sit up and move. The officers recovered a loaded revolver from Sterling’s pocket.
Sterling was in “agony” for minutes before he died “as a result of the vicious, negligent, and unreasonable fatal actions” of the officers, the family’s lawsuit said.
Baton Rouge Police Sgt. Don Coppola, a department spokesman, said Tuesday he can’t comment on pending litigation.
John McLindon, Salamoni’s attorney in the criminal investigation, said he doesn’t represent the officer for any civil cases, but disagrees with “just about everything they’ve alleged” against Salamoni.
Acting U.S. Attorney Corey Amundson said during a news conference last month that there wasn’t enough evidence to prove that Salamoni or Lake acted unreasonably and willfully after they responded to a report of a man with a gun outside the Triple S Food Mart.
The officers told Sterling to put his hands on the hood of a car and struggled with him when he didn’t comply, according to Amundson. Lake shocked Sterling with a stun gun before the officers wrestled him to the ground, Amundson said. Lake also is white.
Sterling had a history of “adverse breathing problems and could not lie on his back for any extended period of time,” the lawsuit said.
Both officers remain on administrative leave, a standard procedure.
Nearly 200 protesters were arrested in Baton Rouge last July after Sterling's death. Racial tensions were simmering in the city when a black military veteran from Missouri ambushed and killed three Baton Rouge law enforcement officers and wounded three others before being shot dead on July 17.
“We can't do anything to bring Alton Sterling back,” said plaintiffs’ attorney Michael Adams. “This is about his children and this is about bringing this community together.”"
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