CBC News – Dashcam movie shows officer firing seven shots into Philando Castile car

Dashcam movie shows officer firing seven shots into Philando Castile car

The Associated Press

Last Updated:Jun 21, two thousand seventeen Ten:05 AM ET

In this picture made from July 6, 2016, movie captured by a camera in the squad car of St. Anthony Police officer Jeronimo Yanez. St. Anthony Police Department/Associated Press

Movie

The Minnesota police officer who pulled over Philando Castile politely told the driver that his brake lights were out and calmly instructed him not to pull out his handgun before all of a sudden drawing his own weapon and firing seven rounds into the car, a movie released Tuesday displayed.

The dashboard movie taken from St. Anthony police Officer Jeronimo Yanez’s squad car illustrated how a plain traffic stop of a black man shifted in an instant from a routine exchange to a deadly confrontation.

When Yanez opened fire, another officer near the car hopped back, and Yanez began yelling at the driver. As more police and an ambulance arrived, Yanez could be heard breathing powerfully and swearing and attempting to explain his deeds to fellow officers.

The movie was made public just days after the Latino officer was acquitted on all counts in the case. Albeit the squad-car footage was described repeatedly and was shown to jurors in the courtroom, it had never been made public until Tuesday.

The shooting on July 6, 2016, in the Twin Cities suburb of Falcon Heights gained widespread attention because Castile’s gf, Diamond Reynolds, livestreamed its gruesome aftermath on Facebook. Unlike Reynolds’ movie, the squad-car movie shows the situation’s quick escalation and the shooting itself.

GRAPHIC WARNING: Police dashcam movie released of Philando Castile shooting1:14

Yanez, who was found not guilty of manslaughter and other charges, began firing only seconds after Castile told the officer he had a gun.

“Tormentor, I have to tell you, I do have a firearm on me,” Castile said.

Before Castile finished that sentence, Yanez began pulling his weapon out of the holster. Yanez said, “OK. Don’t reach for it then.” He told the driver twice more not to pull out the weapon and then began firing into the car. After the firing finishes, he screamed, “Don’t pull it out!”

Castile, a 32-year-old elementary school cafeteria worker, had a permit to carry the weapon.

The release of the movie made some people even angrier about the death.

Steven Belton, the black president and CEO of the Minneapolis Urban League, said the footage was “powerfully painful” and that Castile was “gunned down like a rabid animal.”

Bekuh Sibet, a 29-year-old waitress from nearby Richfield, said it was demonstrable to her from the movie that Castile was conforming.

“I feel like it’s ten times worse now,” said Sibet, who is white.

Craig Hutchinson, a white employment recruiter from the Minneapolis suburb of Plymouth, said in a tweet to The Associated Press that he was astonished at how quickly the situation intensified.

Hutchinson, who said he has a concealed-carry permit, also said the movie left room for reasonable doubt, because it does not display where the gun was. He also said Yanez could have acted differently.

“If the officer would’ve exercised more caution, it may not have escalated as prompt,” he said.

Marcell Lenoir, a 24-year-old insurance worker from suburban Brooklyn Center, referred back to testimony that the officer thought Castile resembled a suspected armed robber.

“He already thought in his mind that this was a suspect in a robbery, and he just panicked and he messed up,” said Lenoir, who is mixed race, African-American and white.

The footage shows a broad view of the traffic stop and the shooting, with the camera pointed toward Castile’s vehicle. It captures what was said inbetween the two fellows. The movie does not demonstrate what happened inwards the car or what Yanez eyed.

Yanez testified that Castile overlooked his guidelines not to pull out the gun.

The movie shows Yanez following Castile’s car, then pulling it over. Yanez can be seen approaching Castile and asking for a driver’s license and proof of insurance. Castile gives the proof of insurance to Yanez through the driver’s side window, and the officer puts it in his pocket.

After the very first shot, Castile’s bod is thrown to the right. The movie shows Yanez’s backup officer, Joseph Kauser, standing on the passenger side of the vehicle, retreating when the shots were fired.

When the shooting stops, the movie shows Yanez standing at the car window with his gun drawn for some time. Reynolds’ then-4-year-old daughter starts to get out of the car and is grabbed by an officer.

Officers order Reynolds out of the car, and she gets out, arms held high. Soon, she is heard wailing.

A fellow officer speaks repeatedly to Yanez to get him away from the car: “I’m going to take your spot. I’m going to take your spot. Listen, listen, I’m going to take your spot.” Yanez leisurely walks away, and another officer says: “You all right? You all right? You’re not hit any, are you?”

Officers pull Castile from the vehicle and begin CPR. Yanez is then off-camera, but can be heard talking through his assets microphone.

Yanez, 29, is heard telling a supervisor that he didn’t know where Castile’s gun was, then telling that he told Castile to get his mitt off it. Yanez testified, “What I meant by that was I didn’t know where the gun was up until I spotted it in his right hip area.”

Yanez’s acquittal prompted days of protests, including one in St. Paul last Friday that attracted thousands and shut down Interstate ninety four for hours. Eighteen people were arrested.

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