Activists say LAPD hasn't kept public informed about probe of Devin Brown slaying
- Originally published in the Los Angeles Times March 23, 2005 Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times
By Richard Winton, Times Staff Writer
About
two dozen community activists criticized the Los Angeles Police
Department and Chief William J. Bratton on Tuesday for breaking a
promise to keep the public informed about the investigation into the
fatal shooting of 13-year-old Devin Brown.
"We
are concerned the process is under a cloak of secrecy," said the Rev.
Lewis Logan of Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church at the Police
Commission meeting in downtown Los Angeles.
The
church is a short distance from the spot in South Los Angeles where
Officer Steve Garcia fired his handgun 10 times, killing Devin on Feb.
6. "We want accountability on a weekly basis," Logan said.
Nation of Islam
minister Tony Muhammad, one of more than 100 protesters, said: "The
Police Department is saying it is transparent. It is not transparent.
That's a lie. You cannot tell us nothing."
Bratton
said he will have more to discuss publicly after an unprecedented
re-creation to scale of the shooting incident. The simulation at an
LAPD facility involves the use of lasers, automobiles and cameras.
"We
will be in a position to talk some more about it" when the reenactment
is completed, Bratton said. Garcia has been assigned to desk duty,
pending the completion of the investigation, the police chief said.
After
the February shooting, the LAPD held a news conference and presented
diagrams outlining the police pursuit of Devin in a stolen car. Details
were disclosed of radio communications about the incident, which began
as officers spotted a suspected drunk driver.
The
pursuit ended when the stolen car ran up onto a curb and stopped and
the police cruiser pulled in behind it. Police said that the car began
backing into the cruiser and that, at some point, Garcia opened fire.
But
the LAPD has yet to provide a definitive explanation of Devin's fatal
shooting, particularly one specifying Garcia's position when he fired
the shots.
Several activists Tuesday
suggested that the LAPD was protecting the officer and questioned why
Garcia needed to fire repeatedly to defend himself.
Deputy
Chief Michael Berkow said Garcia's location would not alone determine
"whether this was a lawful, justified shooting or something else."