Shooting of Akai Gurley

Shooting of Akai Gurley
Time c. 11:15 p.m. EST
Date November 20, 2014 (2014-11-20)
Location Brooklyn, New York, United States
Participants Killed: Akai Gurley
Officers: Peter Liang and Shaun Landau
Deaths 1
Suspect(s) Peter Liang
Charges Second-degree manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, second-degree assault, reckless endangerment, two counts of official misconduct
Convictions Manslaughter, official misconduct
Litigation $52 million lawsuit filed by Gurley's family against City of New York

Akai Gurley, a 28-year-old African-American man, was fatally shot on November 20, 2014, in Brooklyn, New York City, United States, by a New York City Police Department officer. Two police officers, patrolling stairwells in the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA)'s Louis H. Pink Houses in East New York, Brooklyn, entered a pitch-dark, unlit stairwell, one of them, Officer Peter Liang, 27, with his firearm drawn. Gurley and his girlfriend entered the seventh-floor stairwell, fourteen steps below them. The shooting was declared an accidental discharge; the bullet ricocheted off the wall and Gurley was struck once in the chest and later died from the shot.

On February 10, 2015, Liang was indicted by a grand jury on manslaughter, assault, and other criminal charges. He turned himself in to authorities the next day to be arraigned on the charges. Liang was found guilty of manslaughter and official misconduct on February 11, 2016. He was expected to appeal while he remained free without bail. On March 28, 2016, the prosecuting Brooklyn District Attorney Kenneth P. Thompson recommended to Judge Danny Chun that Liang serve only house arrest and community service for his sentencing.[1]

On April 19, 2016, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun sentenced Peter Liang to five years of probation and 800 hours community service, after downgrading his manslaughter conviction to criminally negligent homicide.[2]

Background

Akai Gurley

Akai Kareem Gurley (c.1986  November 20, 2014) was born in Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands, the Caribbean, and moved to New York when he was a child.[3] He was a resident of the Louis H. Pink Houses, where he lived with his girlfriend and two-year-old daughter. [4][5]

Officer Peter Liang

See also: Wen Jian Liu and Jason Lai

Peter Liang (born c.1987), a Hong Kong American, had less than 18 months of experience with New York City Police Department (NYPD) at the time of the shooting. Liang was born in Hong Kong, immigrated to the United States as a child and lived in Bensonhurst, Brooklyn, with his parents and grandmother; he also has a younger brother in college.[6] Liang had aspired to become a police officer since he was a child.[7]

Location

The Louis Pink Houses are considered to be among the worst housing developments in New York.[8] Patrick Lynch, head of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association of the City of New York, characterizes them as "among the most dangerous projects in the city" with dimly lit stairwells presenting a particular danger.[9] Police Commissioner Bill Bratton reported that there had been a recent "spike in violence" in the neighborhood; according to NYPD statistics there were two murders and four shootings in the Pink Houses in the preceding year.[9][10]

Shooting

Two rookie police officers assigned to the NYCHA's Louis H. Pink Houses where they were conducting routine vertical patrols,[11][12] in which officers patrol a public housing complex from the roof to the ground floor, stopping on each floor to see if there is any crime in progress.[10][13] At the time their commander had instructed officers in the area not to carry out vertical patrols and instead conduct exterior policing in the East New York housing project.[14] The NYPD’s policy on whether an officer should keep a weapon holstered on such patrols is purposely vague and the decision as to when to take a firearm out is left to the discretion of the officers, according to Police Commissioner Bill Bratton.[15] The department also insists, however, that officers place their fingers on the trigger only upon encountering "extreme and particularized danger." [16] At the time of gun was discharged, the light in the stairwell at 8th floor was broken.

Akai Gurley, 28 years old, was visiting his girlfriend and getting his hair braided before Thanksgiving. He entered the stairwell about a flight below Officers Shaun Landau and Peter Liang, who were patrolling the pitch-dark stairwell with no lights. According to the prosecutors, Officer Liang, who is left-handed, pulled out his flashlight with his right hand and unholstered his 9mm Glock with his left. He then shoved open the stairwell door with his right shoulder, turned left to face the seventh-floor landing, where Gurley had just entered. It appeared neither side knew the other was there and no words were exchanged, according to authorities.[17] After being startled, Liang's gun accidentally discharged as he opened the door and the bullet ricocheted off the wall and struck Gurley once in the chest, who died within minutes.[18][19][20] It was reported that Gurley actually ran after hearing the gunshot, and didn’t realize that he was bleeding until collapsing on the fifth floor.[20]

Similarity to another shooting

The fatal shooting of Akai Gurley is notably[21][22] similar to the shooting death of Timothy Stansbury Jr. that occurred in January 2004, when Officer Richard S. Neri killed Timothy Stansbury Jr., 19, on a roof at the Louis Armstrong Houses in Brooklyn at about 1 a.m. when Officer Neri, with his gun drawn, approached a rooftop door to check the stairway inside. A grand jury declined to indict Officer Neri on charges of criminally negligent homicide, declaring the event an accident, after he gave testimony that he had unintentionally fired; he was startled, he said, when Mr. Stansbury pushed open a rooftop door in a place where drug dealing was rampant.[23][24][25]

Aftermath

New York City Police Commissioner Bill Bratton declared the shooting to be an accident and that Gurley was a "total innocent".[26] Kings county district attorney Kenneth P. Thompson said that he planned to impanel a grand jury to look into the death of Akai Gurley.[19][27] Media reports initially surfaced that indicated both officers text messaged their union representatives before calling for help,[14] which was later refuted as false by both the police union and the District Attorney office.[28][29]

Akai Gurley's funeral was conducted December 6 at the Brown Memorial Baptist Church in Fort Greene. Initially Al Sharpton offered to speak at the service, but stepped down after a dispute within the family. Instead activist Kevin Powell spoke at the service.[30][31] Gurley is interred at Rosedale Memorial Park in Linden, New Jersey.[3]

The continued conduct of vertical patrols has also been scrutinized in the wake of Gurley's shooting. Police Commissioner William Bratton has said that the patrols are needed to reduce crime,[10][13] and vertical patrols continue to be conducted in the Pink Houses.[32] On February 5, 2016, while Liang's trial was ongoing, two NYPD officers were shot while conducting vertical patrols at a housing development in the Bronx, although both were expected to survive.[33][34]

Reactions

Chinese-Americans

Protestors supporting Peter Liang on February 20, 2016, at Boston Common

More than 3,000 Chinese Americans showed up at New York City Hall in March 2015 to support Liang. Thousands walked across the Brooklyn Bridge to Manhattan's Chinatown in April,[35] feeling that Liang was being used as a scapegoat and demanded the charges to be dropped, as other, white police officers were previously not charged.[36][37] Following the conviction, Asian-Americans denounced the verdict at various gatherings, many expressing dismay and frustration.[38] State Assemblyman Ron Kim stated, "I do not believe true justice prevailed. Our system failed Gurley and it failed Liang. It pitted the unjust death of an innocent young black man against the unjust scapegoating of a young Asian police officer who was frightened, poorly trained, and who committed a terrible accident."[39] Nearly 15,000 people protested on behalf of Liang in New York on February 20, 2016,[40] and protests were also held in other cities across the United States on the same day.[41]

Joseph Lin, a real estate agent and activist, had helped to organize the protests due to feeling that Asian-Americans had been too "passive" or "indifferent" with no political voice, saying that "If he’s a black officer, I guarantee you Al Sharpton will come out. If he’s Hispanic, all the congressmen will come out. But no, he’s a Chinese, so no one is coming out."[42]

New York City councilwoman Margaret Chin stated that she was satisfied with the grand jury indicting Liang but she also asked for leniency in Liang’s sentencing.[43][44][45]

Black Lives Matter movement

Gurley's death was one of several police killings of African Americans protested by the Black Lives Matter movement.[46][47] On December 27, 2014, 200 people marched in Brooklyn to protest the fatal shooting of Akai Gurley on the same day as the funeral for NYPD Officer Rafael Ramos, who was killed in the 2014 killings of NYPD officers, despite calls from the mayor to postpone demonstrations.[48][49][50]

Legal proceedings

On February 10, 2015, Officer Peter Liang was indicted by a grand jury for the shooting death of Akai Gurley. He was charged with second-degree manslaughter, criminally negligent homicide, second-degree assault, reckless endangerment, and two counts of official misconduct. Liang had a court date on February 11, and turned himself in that day.[51][52] He pleaded not guilty to the charges and was released without having to post bond, and suspended from his job without pay. Peter Liang's trial started on January 25, 2016. Liang was found guilty of manslaughter and official misconduct on February 11, 2016.[53] Liang now faces anywhere from no jail to a maximum of 15 years of prison when he is sentenced April 14.[54] His lawyers are planning to submit an appeal to Judge Danny Chun while Liang currently remains free without bail.[39] Delores Jones-Brown, a professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, speculated to The Atlantic that Liang would have avoided conviction had he rendered aid to Gurley, while jurors later reported that the effort required to pull the trigger on a police-issued pistol led them to disbelieve Liang's testimony that the discharge was accidental. [55]

Shaun Landau, the other officer involved, was not criminally implicated in Gurley's death.[50] However, he was fired from the NYPD one day after his partner was convicted. Officer Landau, like Liang, was also within his two year probationary period, and his firing after the trial was within his contract. Landau testified at the trial of his former partner under immunity from prosecution. Landau described his partner as "in shock" and that "[Liang] couldn't believe he just shot someone." He said that neither of them tried to revive Mr. Gurley, with both of them saying that they did not feel qualified to perform CPR. Both radioed for an ambulance, as Gurley's girlfriend unsuccessfully performed CPR.[56][57]

On April 19, 2016, Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Danny Chun sentenced Peter Liang to five years of probation and 800 hours community service. Chun believes incarceration is "unnecessary”, but "he will be much more productive if he spends more time in community service.” [2]

Media coverage

The incident received national and international coverage, in part due to the time of its occurrence shortly after the August 2014 police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri; the July 2014 death of Eric Garner in Staten Island, which also involved police officers; and the Ferguson unrest after Brown's fatal shooting, which had attracted public attention.[58][59]

The New York City Police Department's practice of vertical patrols was also criticized.[60][61] The Village Voice described the incident as part of a year of public relations disasters for the NYPD.[62] Other coverage has focused on the maintenance and public safety issues that led to the death.[63][64][65]

See also

References

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