California: Police call for calm after immigrant death probe

LOS ANGELES (AP) -- The Los Angeles Police Commission said Tuesday that an officer was justified in using lethal force on a Guatemalan immigrant last year -- a fatal shooting that sparked days of protest in the Latino community. The ruling by the civilian oversight panel put police on alert for renewed unrest, but no problems were immediately reported. Police mobilized ahead of the findings' release, and at least one immigration activist group had called for a rally near MacArthur Park, where Manuel Jaminez died. About three dozen people attended the rally, which police said was calm. In its findings, the commission accepted an internal report by the LAPD that concluded the Sept. 5 killing of Jaminez was a proper use of lethal force. An independent review by Inspector General Nicole C. Bershon also determined the shooting was in line with department policy, the commission's president, John W. Mack, said. "I'm confident, when I speak on behalf of my fellow commissioners, that our review of the case has been exhaustive, conclusive and has left no stone unturned," Mack said. "This has been a long, particularly difficult and sad incident for all involved." The district attorney's office also announced it concluded last week that Officer Frank Hernandez acted in self-defense, and that it declined to file criminal charges. A Los Angeles attorney for Jaminez's Guatemala-based family, which is suing police, said he was disappointed but not surprised. "The script was already written," Luis A. Carrillo said. Police Chief Charlie Beck and Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said the investigation was thorough and unbiased. At a news conference, they called for calm and noted that since the incident, police sought to improve relations with the Guatemalan community in the area where the shooting occurred. Southern California Immigration Coalition, which organized the rally, said in a statement that "we cannot allow the LAPD to murder yet another migrant from our community!" Police said Jaminez, 37, a day laborer, had been drinking and tried to stab a pregnant woman and other passers-by before Hernandez, a bicycle officer, shot him. A police report said Jaminez lunged toward an officer after refusing orders in Spanish and English to drop the knife. Beck said six witnesses told police they saw Jaminez with the knife, and that other witnesses said they heard the officer order him to drop the weapon. DNA testing showed blood on the knife belonged to Jaminez, which Beck said proved he had held it. Three days of sometimes violent protests were held by activists and immigrants who didn't believe the police version of events or felt that non-lethal force should have been used. Published: Thu, Mar 17, 2011