
One witness, Ailene Romero, said she never saw a gun, and Gonzales shot King as he was running away.
King was taken to Highland Hospital where he later died.
"He laid there and died right in front of us," said Shamar Bell, who said he witnessed the shooting and said he had known King since grade school. He said he did not see the officer pat King down before detaining him."(Gonzales) put handcuffs on him while he was on his stomach (in the street) in front of us," Bell said.
"If he so feared for his life, why didn't he call for backup?"
At one point during the struggle, witnesses said, Gonzales held King by his braids as he tried to break free and escape.Anela Hobbs said she saw Gonzales use his taser several times on King and saw King reach deep into his low-slung pants. Gonzales then let go of his braids, she said. King had turned to run away when the officer shot twice at him.
"I don't know protocol. I don't know policy. I just know life," Hobbs said. "It was a lose-lose situation all around.
"Romero said seeing King handcuffed after being shot was distressing. She questioned why the police would not aim for King's leg instead of shooting him fatally.Both practices are Oakland police policy in such cases.
"He was a good kid and was straightening out his life," said one of King's friends, who was with King when the incident began and saw the shooting.
Semir Jehar, who was working at a shoe and clothing store that day on Martin Luther King Jr. Way, ran outside when he heard the commotion.When outside, Jehar said he saw King cooperating, but when Gonzales tried to subdue King, he resisted and tried to get out of Gonzales's hold.
"I thought the police officer maybe shot him with rubber bullets," Jehar said.
"The police officer shouldn't have resorted to his gun."
Larry Rollins best summed up the communities feelings about Gonzales when he said, "He beat my son, and he murdered my son. This man is a cancer in our community. He is a disease in the body, and he must be removed."
Gonzales, promoted to Sargent for his kills,today remains the deadliest cop on the streets of Oakland.
[quotes and excerpts taken from San Francisco Chronicle]
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