The email sent will contain a link to this article, the article title, and an article excerpt (if available). For security reasons, your IP address will also be included in the sent email.
From [HERE] Civil rights attorney, John Burris said Thursday he will ask the U.S. Justice Department to review the Vallejo Police Department's latest fatal officer-involved shooting. Burris told a news conference that he is representing Joseph Johnson, 21, and Mario Romero's 3-year-old daughter.
Johnson and Romero, 23, were involved in an officer-involved shooting early Sept. 2 in which Romero was killed and Johnson was wounded. The two were sitting in Romero's car outside his North Vallejo home at about 4:30 a.m.. Police contend that when they approached the car, Romero reached for a gun in his waistband, and that is why he was shot. The gun was later identified as a pellet gun. Family members have strongly denied he had a gun as well as other claims police have made. [MORE] They were not engaged in any unlawful activity.
Along with a letter seeking a Justice Department investigation, Burris said he will file a federal civil rights suit against the police department. "We believe that this issue is a large part of a bigger issue in Vallejo," Burris said. "There's a systematic problem in the department, not just in this one case."
Romero's was the the fifth Vallejo officer-involved shooting death since May 25. "It is an astronomical number for a city the size of Vallejo," Burris said. Burris responded, "soon" when asked when he would take the two actions. "My letter is going to request another investigation of the systematic discriminating nature of (Vallejo) law enforcement," he said. "It is not illegal to sit in the car, even if it's at 4 in the morning. I call it racial profiling."