No punishment for Denver officers who shot, killed teenager

Yahoo News

DENVER (AP) — Two Denver officers involved in a fatal shooting that sparked angry protests and followed high-profile killings by police elsewhere in the country will not be disciplined, officials said Monday.

An investigation by the Denver Police Department and other agencies determined the officers used appropriate force when they shot and killed Jessica Hernandez, 17, on Jan. 26, 2015. The review also said they complied with policies in place at the time.  

“Nonetheless, this incident is a tragedy for all involved,” the department said in a news release. “Ms. Hernandez had her whole life in front of her and we mourn her loss with the family.”

The Denver District Attorney’s Office declined to prosecute the officers, saying their lives where threatened when Hernandez drove toward them in a stolen car. The vehicle did not hit either officer, but Mitch Morrissey, who was district attorney at the time, said it was dangerously close.

The officers fired eight shots into the car, hitting Hernandez three times. Four other teenagers who were in the vehicle were not injured.

Shortly after Hernandez’s death, the police department barred officers from shooting at moving vehicles unless someone inside is firing at them. The teen’s shooting marked the fourth time in seven months that Denver police fired into a moving vehicle.

The old guidelines let officers fire on a car if it was bearing down on them and there was a chance they could be struck. An independent monitor of the department deemed those rules inadequate, in part because they didn’t urge officers to avoid entering a vehicle’s path in the first place.

Attorneys for the teen’s family released a statement Monday saying they will continue to advocate for police reform.

“DPD’s changed policies on vehicle stops and shooting into moving vehicles will hopefully prevent future tragedies like the killing of Jessie and other members of the Denver community,” the statement said. “The Hernandez family will continue to work with the community and Denver to try to bring about positive change and ensure that Jessie’s death was not in vain.”

The shooting prompted protests in Denver and came shortly after the officer-involved deaths of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and Eric Garner in New York.

https://www.yahoo.com/news/no-punishment-denver-officers-shot-killed-teenager-034503305.html?soc_src=mail&soc_trk=ma

3 thoughts on “No punishment for Denver officers who shot, killed teenager

  1. Even *supposing* that she really did intentionally drive directly at the two pigs — which I doubt, since pigs are liars from the pits of hell — I fail to see how shooting the driver of a car that’s coming at you would be effective at stopping the car in time. Handgun bullets can take several seconds to incapacitate someone unless the brain or upper spinal cord is hit. And even if the driver is killed instantly, that isn’t going to cause the car to stop on a dime. The car is going to keep right on moving.

    The sensible thing to do if someone is trying to hit you with a car is immediately jump out of its path. If there’s no time to do that, jumping up and rolling onto the hood can lessen the impact. Standing there and shooting at the driver only makes it MORE likely that the car will hit you.

  2. Did you expect a different outcome? Uniformed thugs are always found innocent when they murder people. Wouldn’t make any sense to get the f#@k out of the way or not put ones self in a position to get hurt in the first place.
    They are liars and without their badge and gun…pussies. Uniformed thugs just like negros want respect and it can only be attained by cleaning your own damn houses, we can’t do it for you.

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