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Friday, October 25, 2013
Boy carrying toy gun shot dead by police
A 13-year-old boy carrying a replica assault rifle
has been shot dead by police in the US state of
California, the BBC reports.
Officers in the city of Santa Rosa say they opened
fire after the boy refused orders to drop the rifle,
which they believed to be real.
The shooting on Tuesday is now being
investigated.
It comes a day after a 12-year-old boy in Nevada
shot dead a maths teacher at his school and
wounded two fellow pupils before taking his own
life.
In the latest incident, two sheriff’s deputies saw
the teenager “with what appeared to be some
type of rifle”, a news release from the Sonoma
County Sheriff’s office said.
The deputies called for backup and repeatedly
ordered the boy to drop the gun before firing
several rounds from their handguns, police said.
The boy, who was pronounced dead at the
scene, was later identified by his family as Andy
Lopez.
“He was holding the weapon in his left hand. He
began to turn toward his right in the direction of
the deputy, and in so doing he moved the gun
toward the deputy, and the deputy’s mindset
was that he was fearful he would be shot,” Lt
Paul Henry of Santa Rosa police said.
But the boy’s father, Rodrigo Lopez said the
shooting made no sense. “My son lost his life.
He’s not alive any more just because of the
mistake of somebody.”
The replica gun had belonged to a friend, he
said.
The sheriff’s office said a plastic handgun had
also been found in the boy’s waistband.
Witness Brian Zastrow told the Santa Rosa Press
Democrat he heard seven shots.
“First, I heard a single siren and within seconds I
heard seven shots go off, sounded like a nail
gun,” he said.
One man who saw the events unfold said the
shooting was over in an instant.
“He pulled over to the kid walking and he just
opened the door and shot him, three shots,”
Ismael Mondragon told KGO-TV.
Police Lt Dennis O’Leary said the deputies had
been placed on administrative leave pending the
inquiry.
Sheriff Steve Freitas described the shooting as a
“tragedy” and promised the investigation would
be thorough and transparent.
“As a father of two boys about this age, I can’t
begin to imagine the grief this family is going
through,” he said.
A spokeswoman for the boy’s school described
him as “a very loved student, a very popular,
very handsome young man, very smart and
capable”.
Linsey Gannon, assistant principal at Lawrence
Cook Middle School, said he played trumpet in
the school band.
“Our community has been rocked by his loss,”
she said.
Candles, teddy bears and flowers have since
been left at the scene of the shooting.
“He was a good kid, he was 13 years old. He
didn’t look like a man, Andy, he was a boy,” one
friend told local media.
On Monday, a 12-year-old boy who has not been
named opened fire at a school in Sparks, Nevada,
killing maths teacher and Afghanistan veteran
Michael Landsberry.
Police said Mr Landsberry had tried to coax the
boy to drop the gun, enabling children in the
playground to flee.
The boy then shot and injured two fellow pupils,
before taking his own life on the outdoor
basketball court.
President Barack Obama has recently renewed
calls for changes to US gun laws following a
series of deadly shootings. However, the BBC’s
Alastair Leithead in Los Angeles says the
proposals face fierce resistance.
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