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‘Touch Me and See What’s Up!’: Body Cam Video Shows Cop Fatally Shooting Man Who Brandished Knife in California Intersection

 

 

Warning: the video is graphic.

Body camera and other video released this week shows a confrontation which led to the eventual police shooting of Tyrell Wilson, 32, in Danville, Calif., on March 11. Officer Andrew Hall, a 7-and-a-half-year veteran of the Danville Police Department, confronted Wilson in an intersection, the video shows. When Hall pulled the trigger, his body camera revealed that he appeared to have a sticker of a “Thin Blue Line” flag attached to his service weapon.

Andrew Hall’s gun has what appears to be a sticker of a “Thin Blue Line” flag attached to its grip.

A March 11 press release from the Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Office said Hall was dispatched at 11:48 a.m. after police “received several calls from motorists regarding a person who was throwing rocks off the Sycamore Valley Road overpass onto Highway 680.” (In California, that suspected crime would seem to qualify as both assault with a deadly weapon and battery.) The news release continues:

A Danville Police Officer arrived at the scene and contacted the subject in question in the area of Sycamore Valley Road and Camino Ramon. The officer approached the subject who was standing on the street. As the officer tried to talk to him, the subject pulled out a folding knife and then opened it. The officer ordered him to drop the knife several times. He then advanced toward the officer, who discharged his weapon striking the subject once. The fire department and an ambulance were called and responded to the scene. The subject was taken to a local hospital where he is being treated at this time.

A subsequent release dated March 13 identified both Wilson and Hall. Wilson was described as “a 32-year-old transient who was staying in the area of the Danville Sycamore Valley Park & Ride on Sycamore Valley Road.” He was listed in critical condition. Hall was said to have been placed on “paid administrative leave per department policy.”

A third release dated March 17 indicated that Wilson died at the hospital:

The Office of the Sheriff recognizes the impact an event like this can have on the community and is committed to full transparency of all the facts. Sheriff’s investigators continue to work with the District Attorney’s Office on investigating this incident pursuant to the countywide law enforcement involved fatal incident protocol.

Body camera video of the March 11 incident was released on April 21, about the time Hall was charged with voluntary manslaughter in an unrelated deadly on-duty shooting in 2018.

The body camera video shows Hall exiting his squad car and approaching Wilson at the same intersection where the shooting occurred.

“Hey, buddy,” Hall yelled to Wilson. “Come here for one — real quick. Come here. Come here.”

“No,” Wilson said.

“Come here!” Hall said several times in quick succession.

“Who are you?” Wilson repeatedly asked.

“You’re jaywalking now,” Hall said.  “Get over here.”

Hall called for “cover” on his police radio.

“Come here,” Hall continued to ask.

“No,” Wilson continued to say as Hall approached.

“We’re not playing this game, dude,” Hall said.

“I’m not playing this game, either,” Wilson said.

“You’re jaywalking; you’re throwing rocks,” Hall said.

“And who are you?” Wilson asked.

“Officer Hall of the Danville Police,” Hall responded.

“Authority of what?”  Wilson appeared to retort several times in response.

Tyrell Wilson brandished a knife seconds before he was shot.

“Touch me and see what’s up!” Wilson then said at least twice. Wilson produced a knife in his right hand.

Several freeze frames from Andrew Hall’s body camera video show Tyrell Wilson’s knife.

Video from other angles also released by the sheriff’s office shows Hall advancing toward Wilson during most of the encounter as Wilson walked or backed away. After Wilson drew the knife, Wilson took steps toward Hall before Hall pulled the trigger split seconds later. Wilson immediately collapsed to the ground. Video showed that he was bleeding profusely.

A screen capture from a stopped motorist’s dash cam shows Wilson advance on Hall split seconds before he was shot. Though it is difficult to see due to the white service van in the background, Hall’s arms are outstretched, and he is holding his pistol.

“Hey, why’d you shoot him man?” someone off camera yelled to Hall several times after the shooting.

“I’m fine, just — you know,” Hall later said when a responding officer asked him if he was okay.

Officers who began arriving at the scene donned gloves and tried to help Wilson. None asked Hall what transpired.

Hall eventually moved to a nearby cruiser and shut off his body camera video when another officer told him it was okay to do so.

Around the time of the release of the video, Hall was charged criminally for shooting and killing Laudemere Arboleda during a Nov. 2018 traffic pursuit. Hall shot Arboleda nine times, Contra Costa County District Attorney Diane Becton said during a news conference. Hall’s defense attorney is arguing that shooting qualifies as self-defense and as the defense of another.

“When Officer Hall fired his weapon, he felt not only was his life in the imminent danger by virtue of this car approaching him, but he felt his Sergeant’s life was in danger as well because he saw a sergeant arrive and believed his sergeant was in the path of the car,” Hall’s attorney Michael Rains told San Francisco ABC affiliate KGO-TV.

Becton believes otherwise.

“Officer Hall used unnecessary and unreasonable force when he responded to the in-progress traffic pursuit involving Laudemere Arboleda, endangering not only Mr. Arboleda’s, life but the lives of fellow officers and citizens in the immediate area,” she said.

[all images via body camera video released by the Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Office]

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Aaron Keller holds a juris doctor degree from the University of New Hampshire School of Law and a broadcast journalism degree from Syracuse University. He is a former anchor and executive producer for the Law&Crime Network and is now deputy editor-in-chief for the Law&Crime website. DISCLAIMER:  This website is for general informational purposes only. You should not rely on it for legal advice. Reading this site or interacting with the author via this site does not create an attorney-client relationship. This website is not a substitute for the advice of an attorney. Speak to a competent lawyer in your jurisdiction for legal advice and representation relevant to your situation.