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NewsDecember 15, 2015

LYNWOOD, Calif. -- When deputies confronted a man carrying a handgun in a Los Angeles suburb, the fatal shooting that unfolded was different from other recent flashpoints in the debate over police use of force: The suspect was armed and in an area crowded with people...

By AMANDA LEE MYERS ~ Associated Press
A sidewalk memorial is seen for Nicholas Robertson on Sunday in Lynwood, California. Robertson was shot fatally Saturday by Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies in Lynwood, south of Los Angeles. Authorities said Robertson was shot after he refused to drop a gun he was carrying. (David Martin ~ Associated Press)
A sidewalk memorial is seen for Nicholas Robertson on Sunday in Lynwood, California. Robertson was shot fatally Saturday by Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputies in Lynwood, south of Los Angeles. Authorities said Robertson was shot after he refused to drop a gun he was carrying. (David Martin ~ Associated Press)

LYNWOOD, Calif. -- When deputies confronted a man carrying a handgun in a Los Angeles suburb, the fatal shooting that unfolded was different from other recent flashpoints in the debate over police use of force: The suspect was armed and in an area crowded with people.

Friends and relatives of Nicholas Robertson questioned the police tactics that led to his death, particularly why officers fired at a person who apparently was moving away from them and why they kept firing after he crumpled to the ground.

But law-enforcement professionals said Monday the shooting did not appear to have much, if anything, in common with other police shootings that have resulted in criminal charges against officers.

Robertson was killed by officers Saturday after witnesses reported seeing a man firing a handgun into the air six or seven times and going inside a car wash and a pizza parlor.

Video of the shooting, released by the sheriff's department the next day, showed deputies firing at Robertson more than 30 times. In a close-up image, he can be seen stretched out on the pavement holding a gun.

Deputies first spotted him in front of a gas station in the south Los Angeles County suburb of Lynwood, where two women and three children were inside a car. They ordered him to drop the weapon, authorities said.

Robertson refused and at one point pointed the gun in the deputies' direction, according to police.

Jim Bueermann, president of the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit Police Foundation, which is dedicated to better policing, said the shooting is "as different as night and day" when compared with other recent killings, such as the slaying of Walter Scott, an unarmed South Carolina man shot in the back last spring as he ran away from an officer.

"This guy has a gun. He's been firing it. He refuses deputies' orders to drop the gun. I think people might see some similarities, but there are distinct factual differences that people have to consider in terms of public safety."

Bueermann, who also was a longtime police chief of the Redlands Police Department near San Bernardino, said the fact Robertson was in a busy commercial area heightened the risk.

"You cannot let someone armed and firing a weapon" approach a mother with children shopping or some guy walking along and minding his own business, he said.

The police, he added, "have an obligation to people in that area to protect them."

Ken Cooper, a New York-based use-of-force expert who trains police and has testified for and against officers, called the shooting "absolutely justifiable."

Even when Robertson is crawling away, "he's still an active threat. You can be shot to where you're about to die and still be a deadly threat."

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The police "want to stop that man from doing what he's doing, and he's not stopping. He's very intent. What was in his head I guess we'll never know."

"There was never a time when the weapon was not in his possession," homicide Capt. Steven Katz said Sunday.

The suspect's gun was not loaded, but detectives found two live rounds "in his grasp," Katz said. The gun was not registered to Robertson and has not been reported stolen.

Robertson's wife told the Los Angeles Times that her mother-in-law called her shortly before the shooting to say Robertson was under the influence of alcohol. Authorities were looking into whether he had been involved in a domestic dispute.

Robertson's mother and aunt said he had no history of mental illness, and that they don't know how he would have obtained a gun.

His aunt there was no need to shoot him that many times if he was on the ground, crawling away.

The 28-year-old had convictions for driving under the influence, misdemeanor assault and trespassing. Last week, he was sentenced to 22 days in jail and three years' probation for driving with a suspended or revoked license.

He was booked into jail Wednesday and released less than two hours later -- standard procedure in cases involving minor charges.

Robertson, a stay-at-home father of three, was black. Both deputies are Hispanic, a sheriff's spokesman said.

One officer had been working in the field for about a year, the other for about 18 months.

Bueermann said the experience of deputies is rarely a factor. He said he's seen longtime officers make bad choices and rookies show good judgment.

The president of the Los Angeles Urban Policy Roundtable, a civil rights group, called for a Justice Department investigation.

"You wouldn't even treat a dog like that. You have a human being who's on the ground crawling away, not even firing at you. And yet you still empty your weapon, and he's African-American," Earl Ofari Hutchinson said.

Robertson's aunt said the family believes the shooting was entirely about race, and she wants the officers involved removed from the force.

"He was a good father and son. He took care of his children," said Cassandra Howard, who also lives next door to where Robertson lived. "This shouldn't have happened to him. Just like it shouldn't happen to all the others that we see across the United States."

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