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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsOfficer Given Paid Leave After Killing Teen, Participates in NRA-Sponsored "Killer Cop Competition"
Around 3am one night in May 2011, 22-year-old Alan Gomez was outside his brother Erics house in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Nervous because she believed Gomez was acting erratically, Eric's girlfriend called the police. After about an hour, Albuquerque police officer Sean Wallace arrived.
Wallace saw Alan Gomez leave the house and then turn to go back inside. According to a subsequent Department of Justice report, Gomez was unarmed and did not pose an immediate threat to the officers or anyone inside the house. Sean Wallace, however, fired a shot, striking Gomez in the back. Gomez died on the scene, while Wallace was never punished.
Wallace is a K-9 officer, part of a team that works closely with paramilitary SWAT units. He doesnt have a reputable record. In 2004, he shot and killed an unarmed man while with the New Mexico State Police. The victims family received $235,000 from a wrongful death lawsuit. By 2007, Wallace made a "lateral transfer" to the APDmeaning he wasnt required to undergo background checks or psychological evaluations. (Last March, the APD officer who shot and killed James Boyd, a homeless man suffering from mental illness, was also a lateral transfer.) In 2010, Wallace wounded another unarmed man.
When Mike Gomez heard Sean Wallace was going to represent the Albuquerque Police Department in an annual National Rifle Association-sponsored tournament this week, he was horrified. The Albuquerque Police Pistol Combat Tournament, which is being held September 10-18, is designed for public and private law enforcement, as well as select U.S. military members, to compete against each other, shooting human silhouette targets in a wide range of scenarios. Past scenarios include Drunk Buddies, in which friends of a drunk individual getting arrested approach the cop wielding knives and shouting kill the cops. Another scenario, School Gang Violence takes place in a high school. The event also includes a weapons expo show and concludes with an awards ceremony in which officers are given trophies and certificates.
http://www.alternet.org/civil-liberties/officer-who-killed-my-son-got-3-days-paid-leave-then-he-tried-take-part-killer-cop?paging=off
lonestarnot
(77,097 posts)951-Riverside
(7,234 posts)The police were not called because he was "acting erratically". They were called because cause he was holding people hostage in the home armed with a gun and knife, an illegal gun at that, refusing to let them leave. Also known as kidnapping. And he had fired shots from the porch.
He knew the cops were there and refused to follow any commands or release the hostages.
He had put the gun down at the time and picked up a large spoon- and after dark, in a split second chance the officers knowing he had been armed, had previously fired shots, had just talked to a hostage on the phone who said he was still armed, and saw an object in his hand. They had to act when they had him visible and they were in position.
He didn't get shot for "acting erratic", he got shot for kidnapping and actively holding hostages.
But the typical dishonest cop-hating folks at places like Alternet don't bother with facts, not do people who blindly repost the cap here and the other who blindly fall for it.
Oktober
(1,488 posts)I don't understand what the father of the hostage taker is complaining about. Even if you thought it was questionable, why wouldn't you want this guy to get more training and more experience?