Posted on 08/18/2015 10:49:17 AM PDT by nickcarraway
A man who says he saw video of the shooting says the officer acted "hastily"
A man shot to death by a San Diego Police officer was holding a pen that the officer mistook for a knife before firing his weapon, according to the city of San Diegos response to a legal complaint.
The $20 million complaint, filed by the family of Fridoon Rawshan Nehad, 42, claims SDPD Officer Neal Browder used excessive and unreasonable deadly force when he killed Nehad outside a Midway District adult bookstore on April 30.
The allegations are supported by a man who says he saw surveillance video of the incident and called the shooting unprovoked and shocking in a signed statement attached to the complaint. City Attorney Jan Goldsmith filed a response Aug. 13 on behalf of the city of San Diego, which is also named as a defendant in the lawsuit, saying the officer acted reasonably in the deadly incident.
The city says shortly after midnight on April 30, the police department received a 911 call reporting that a man was threatening people with a knife at the Highlight Bookstore on Hancock Street.
Browder, a 27-year veteran of the SDPD, was the first to arrive on scene and drove his patrol car into the stores alley. However, he failed to turn on his body camera a move which prompted changes to the SDPDs policy regarding those devices.
Nehad emerged from the shadows of an alley near the bookstore and headed directly for Officer Browder, the citys response says.
Nehad held a metallic pen that appeared to be a knife, according to the city. Browder got out of his patrol car with his weapon drawn, yelling at Nehad to "drop it or "drop the knife. When Nehad got within 10 or 15 feet of the officer, Browder fired his gun and shot him in the chest. Nehad later died at UC San Diego Medical Center.
Because the incident was not recorded on an officers body camera, the SDPD had to obtain surveillance video from KECO, a nearby business. However, the department refused to turn that video over to Nehads family until they filed a lawsuit, and KECO refused to give it to them without a subpoena.
The complaint instead leans on the declaration of KECO employee Wesley Doyle, who said he has seen the surveillance video 20 to 30 times.
Doyle said the footage was shocking" to see, and believes anybody else who watches it would feel the same. From what he recalls, he said Browder did not make any physical movement like raising his hand to order Nehad to stop, nor did he try to use other measures like a Taser to halt him.
He did not even get into a shooting stance, Doyle wrote in his declaration. The shooting appeared to be unprovoked; Officer Browder appeared to shoot Fridoon hastily.
How Officer-Involved Shooting Could Affect Public Trust[DGO] How Officer-Involved Shooting Could Affect Public Trust
The city denies that deadly force was unwarranted and that Nehad was unarmed.
Officer Browder reasonably believed that plaintiffs decedent [Nehad] was going to harm him or others, and used only the amount of force that was reasonably necessary to protect himself or others, the citys response reads.
Man Who Saw Cop Shooting Video Calls It "Unprovoked"
Click here for the full answer to the complaint.
The city has requested the case move forward to a jury trial. The case is also under review by the San Diego County District Attorney's Office.
In their complaint, Nehads parents accuse Browder of deprivation of Nehads civil rights, assault and battery, negligence and wrongful death.
The shooting ended Nehads long struggle with PTSD and mental illness, his parents said in the complaint. While in the Afghan army, Nehad was captured by a Mujahedeen group and spent nearly two months in captivity, being tortured. He was released when his mother met face-to-face with his captors.
To prevent further injury to their son, his parents said they sent him to Germany for the next 14 years, where he lived away from his family. After the parents fled Afghanistan in favor of the U.S., Nehad joined them there in 2003.
Here in the U.S., he was diagnosed with schizophrenia and bipolar disease. Fridoon battled against his illnesses for years. He was intelligent, learning new languages (German and French) and taking classes on computer programming, linguistics and literature, the complaint reads.
But Nehad suffered manic episodes, becoming aggressive and getting him in trouble with the law. He pleaded guilty to battery in 2005, was sentenced for burglary in 2008 and was charged with petty theft in 2014.
Fridoon was loved. His family spent years and countless hours helping him cope with his PTSD and mental illness, the document said.
However, during one episode, he threatened his mother and sister and said he would light the house on fire so they could all burn. Investigating police recommended the family get a restraining order to help get Nehad into a shelter in Oceanside, according to the document. His mother filed for the restraining order two days before his death.
Guy keeps coming at officer despite repeated warnings, suicide by cop, family should pay restitution to the officer for the emotional trauma he has suffered.
Pens are pretty mighty from what I hear.
I guess dropping the pen was out of the question?
Fridoon is hanging around the alley of an adult bookstore and whips out his.....
...pen?
All. Righty. Then.
This dude was bad news. He had mental illness.
What gets lost in these debates about police shootings is that cops are dealing all too often with the dregs of society like this dude. And that they have to make split second decisions about what to do about a threatening person.
Gun comes out of a dark alley, holding a metallic looking pen (how does anyone know it is a pen and not, say, a knife or something like an exact-o-knife. . and when the officer yells at him to drop it. . the guy keeps closing on the officer until the guy “got within 10 or 15 feet of the officer”. . .what did the guy expect to happen.
Again, tough call but the guy kept advancing and holding something potentially lethal. .was to told to drop it but a) does not stop advancing, did not drop the metallic-looking device in his hands, a device that other people reported as a knife. . .
Shooting stance? More stupid people disinformation. Most shootings happen within 7 yards and quickly. The “shooting stance” is however you are standing/sitting/kneeling when you reach target acquisition. I practice from as many postures as I can.
In all fairness the pen was equipped with a laser beam.
Yup. . .but in this case. . .not as mighty as a firearm.
I’m going to wait to see the video of the shooting before I make a conclusion here. But forgive me if I won’t be too surprised to see that the actual event doesn’t bear even the least resemblance to the official report.
Was it a Black military style fully automatic pen? With Cartridges?
Oops sorry /snort, /cough, thought it was a gun. My bad, move along.
“Browder got out of his patrol car with his weapon drawn, yelling at Nehad to “drop it or “drop the knife. When Nehad got within 10 or 15 feet of the officer, Browder fired his gun and shot him in the chest.”
This guy sees a cop pointing a gun at him, yelling drop the knife.....and you walk towards him? Right or wrong, anywhere on earth, that’s Darwin.
“The shooting ended Nehads long struggle with PTSD and mental illness, his parents said in the complaint. While in the Afghan army, Nehad was captured by a Mujahedeen group and spent nearly two months in captivity, being tortured. He was released when his mother met face-to-face with his captors.
To prevent further injury to their son, his parents said they sent him to Germany for the next 14 years, where he lived away from his family. After the parents fled Afghanistan in favor of the U.S., Nehad joined them there in 2003.”
Mentally ill Afghan soldier went to Germany. His parents came here. They all meet up here because they like it.
None of this would have happened if they weren’t here. Poor cop, feel bad for him.
Lesson learned here: Don’t bring a pen to a gun fight.
If you are holding a pen and someone shouts drop the knife, that is not you, right? Likewise “drop the weapon”, I’m holding a pen or screwdriver or cellphone not a weapon. He’s not yelling at me, I’m not doing anything wrong.
By the time the victim figures this out, the cop has reached his limit and fires.
A violent, Muzzie mental defective is allowed to immigrate to the USA, commits multiple crimes, including against his own family, and now a US citizen / LEO is in the dock? The family sees its golden parachute lawsuit — ticket to easy street. Any word regarding the dollar amount of taxpayer handouts the leetch & his family have taken?
What’s wrong with this picture?!
This LEO was putting his life on the line...he wanted to go home...
A metallic pen can be a weapon, if one knows how to use it as such. If this guy was in the Afghan Army he just might have known how to use said weaponize pen. If you let him get too close you might get a pen through the eye socket and into your brain pan ...
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