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Black man killed by deputies in North Carolina ‘shot in back of head’
26 April 2021, 21:24
An eyewitness account and emergency scanner traffic had previously indicated Mr Brown was shot in the back as he tried to drive away.
A black man killed by deputies in North Carolina was shot in the back of his head and had his hands on the car steering wheel when they opened fire, attorneys for the family said.
Attorney Chantel Cherry-Lassiter watched a 20-second portion of body camera video with the family of Andrew Brown Jr on Monday.
She said Mr Brown did not appear to be a threat to officers as he backed his vehicle out and tried to drive away.
“He was not threatening them in any kind of fashion,” she told reporters at a news conference.
When asked whether Mr Brown was shot in the back, attorney Harry Daniels said: “Yes, back of the head.”
An eyewitness account and emergency scanner traffic had previously indicated Mr Brown was shot in the back as he tried to drive away.
Ms Lassiter, who watched the video multiple times and took notes, said shooting started as soon as the video started.
She said she counted as many as eight deputies in the video, some wearing tactical uniforms and some in plain clothes.
“They’re shooting and saying let me see your hands at the same time,” she said.
The family’s lawyers also criticised local authorities for only showing 20 seconds of the video and only showing them footage from a single body camera.
“They’re trying to hide something,” attorney Benjamin Crump said.
Earlier on Monday, a search warrant was released saying deputies obtained the warrant that brought them there after investigators recorded him selling small amounts of cocaine and methamphetamine to an informant.
Mr Crump argued the authorities were trying to release negative information about Mr Brown while shielding themselves by holding back the video.
Mr Brown’s fatal shooting last Wednesday in Elizabeth City has prompted days of protests, calls for the public release of deputy body camera video and civil rights leaders decrying that warrants should not lead to deaths.