Court Roundup

California
Officer won't be charged in killing of black man

SAN DIEGO (AP) - A suburban San Diego police officer won't face criminal charges for fatally shooting a disturbed black man, a prosecutor announced Tuesday, saying the officer had reason to believe he was in danger when the man suddenly raised both hands and pointed what appeared to be a weapon but actually was an e-cigarette device.

The shooting of 38-year-old Alfred Olango last fall in El Cajon was a reasonable use of force, San Diego County District Attorney Bonnie Dumanis announced.

"The law recognizes police officers are often forced to make split-second decisions in circumstances that are tense, uncertain and rapidly evolving," Dumanis said.

Her office determined "the only reasonable conclusion was the officer's actions were justified," she said.

Olango's shooting in September prompted days of protests and his relatives filed wrongful-death claims with the city, which usually precede lawsuits. They said Olango, a native of Uganda, had a breakdown after the death of a close friend.

Olango's father and others have said they doubted that the district attorney's office could conduct an impartial investigation.

At a news conference, Richard Olango said he would continue to pursue legal action over his son's shooting.

"Nobody should think we are against the police," he said. "We need police but what we are against is the wrong way they are doing things."

The Rev. Shane Harris of the civil rights group National Action Network called for a special prosecutor to investigate the killing.

"The family's going to get payback but we don't just want payback, we want justice," Harris said. "We will continue to put this front and center."

At her earlier news conference, Dumanis acknowledged that the shooting had drawn international attention and protests.

"We are living in a time where the actions of police officers are under scrutiny more than ever, especially when it comes to police shootings," Dumanis said.

Olango was shot on Sept. 27 in the parking lot of a taco shop after police received 911 calls from his sister and others saying he was acting erratically and walking in traffic.

Dumanis said Olango repeatedly refused demands by an officer and pleas by his sister to take his hand out of his pocket.

When he finally did, cellphone and surveillance camera video released by authorities showed him in a shooting stance, with both hands around a metallic, cylindrical object that turned out to be a bulky e-cigarette vaping device.

Olango extended both arms "simulating the firing of a weapon directly at the officer," who ducked and fired four shots, Dumanis said.

The officer who was investigated and another officer armed with a Taser both fired within a minute of confronting Olango.

Olango's sister had described her brother as unbalanced in multiple 911 calls and asked that he be taken to a mental health facility.

An attorney who announced the family's wrongful-death claim filings in November said they want to send a message that police across the nation must do better when dealing with people in mental crisis.

The El Cajon Police Department has specially trained officers to help defuse sometimes-volatile situations that involve people in the throes of mental illness. However, officials said none were available to go to the call involving Olango.

Dumanis also announced at the news conference that four other deadly law enforcement shootings in the county last year were justified.

They involved a man who fired hunting arrows at sheriff's deputies; a man who fired a gun at a deputy then stole a patrol car and carjacked a driver before being shot; a gang member who was killed because deputies thought he was reaching for a gun in his waistband and was armed with a knife, and a man who held a gun to his ex-wife's head after shooting three of her relatives, including her father, killing two.

Idaho
Man to be tried in death of woman

ELKO, Nev. (AP) - A 46-year-old Idaho man accused of murder in Elko County has waived his preliminary hearing and will go to trial in the death of a woman who was decapitated.

Jose de Jesus Segundo-Huizar of Jerome, Idaho has been charged with first-degree murder, kidnapping, child abuse, and concealing or destroying evidence.

The Elko Daily Free Press reports a trial date has not yet been set in Elko District Court after he waived Thursday's preliminary hearing in Justice Court.

A hunter found Carmen Magallanes-Sanchez' body in a shallow grave off the Mountain City Highway about 10 miles north of Elko on Sept. 4 after her boyfriend reported her missing 10 days earlier.

Sheriff's detectives arrested Segundo-Huizar in October after detectives say he showed them where her head was buried nearby.

Published: Thu, Jan 12, 2017