California police officers fatally shoot rapper found sleeping in car
The family of a man who was fatally shot after
he was found sleeping in a car at a Taco Bell drive-thru is accusing a
group of six California police officers of acting as "judge, jury and
executioner."
Family identified the man as Willie McCoy, 20, a local rapper known as Willie Bo, The Guardian reported, and the san fransisco reported the family has hired an attorney to investigate whether police were justified in the use of deadly force.
Family identified the man as Willie McCoy, 20, a local rapper known as Willie Bo, The Guardian reported, and the san fransisco reported the family has hired an attorney to investigate whether police were justified in the use of deadly force.
Six officers fired "multiple
rounds" out of "fear for their own safety" after McCoy
allegedly reached for a handgun after waking up Saturday night, the Vallejo
police said in a statement.
“There was no attempt to try to work out a peaceful
solution,” Marc McCoy, Willie’s older brother, told The Guardian. “The police’s
job is to arrest people who are breaking the law – not take the law into your
own hands. You’re not judge, jury and executioner." Vallejo police said
officers responded to a 911 call around 10:30 p.m. Saturday from Taco Bell
employees who reported someone slumped over in a car's driver's seat
in the drive-thru lane. Two patrol officers found McCoy asleep with a handgun
in his lap, the statement said. They waited for additional officers, police
said, and noticed the door was locked and the transmission was in drive.
Family & friends
mourn the loss of Willie McCoy, a rapper shot & killed by police
in drive-thru. Relatives say he was passed out & should have been
given a chance to react; cops say he was reached for loaded gun that was stolen
in Oregon.
After additional officers arrived,
police moved a patrol vehicle in front of McCoy's car to "prevent
forward or erratic movement," requested a supervisor's help and began
moving another vehicle behind McCoy's car.
That's when McCoy "suddenly" moved
and looked at the officers, the statement said. Officers gave several commands
for McCoy to put his hands up, police said, but he "quickly moved his
hands downward for the firearm."
The six officers opened fire on McCoy and
continued yelling commands, police said. They eventually removed him from the
car and provided medical assistance, the statement said. He died at the
scene.
Police say they are reviewing officer body
camera footage and investigating the shooting with the Solano County
District Attorney's Office. How many times McCoy was shot in a span of
four seconds will be released following an autopsy, the department said. All
six officers are on administrative leave“It’s a really big loss, really, really
unexpected,” David Harrison, McCoy’s cousin told the Chronicle. “There’s a lot
of grieving going on, trying to make sense of this thing.”
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