World / Black man who fell asleep in car shot dead by white US policeman after he resists arrest

Atlanta's Police Chief Erika Shields has resigned after a black man who had fallen asleep in his car at a drive-through restaurant was shot dead by a white police officer. The 27-year-old named Rayshard Brooks was shot after he obtained an officer's taser following a scuffle and began to flee from the scene. Brooks failed sobriety test, police said.

Mail Online : Jun 14, 2020, 11:38 AM
Atlanta: Protests in Atlanta over the death of Rayshard Brooks have turned tense, after flames broke out at the Wendy's fast food restaurant where police fatally shot the man whom investigators say grabbed an officer's taser and pointed it as he fled from police. 

After 10pm on Saturday, a fully involved fire was seen inside the Wendy's where they shooting took place, and thick smoke billowed through the air, as multiple smaller fires burned in the parking lot outside of the building.

The building was engulfed in flames which shot through the air from the roof, and no emergency responders were on the scene after nearly an hour. 


Atlanta fire officials said that they were unable to send trucks through the crowds of protesters blocking the roads around the Wendy's, in fear of endangering both the firefighters and the protesters. As the fire grew, fears mounted that it could ignite a neighboring gas station, but by midnight the fire had burned out without spreading further.

Demonstrators also shut down all lanes of Interstate 75 near the Wendy's for more than an hour. Police in riot gear were seen advancing on the protesters and making arrests at around 10pm. Traffic was restored on the northbound lanes of the interstate by around 10.30pm. 

Atlanta Police Chief Erika Shields resigned on Saturday following the fatal shooting of Brooks, 27, outside of the Wendy's drive-thru late on Friday night.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms announced Shield's resignation, saying the city's top cop offered to 'immediately step aside as police chief so that the city may move forward, with urgency, in rebuilding the trust so desperately needed throughout our communities.' 

Meanwhile, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation has released new surveillance footage of the moment of the fatal shooting, which has drawn massive protests and allegations of racism and police brutality.

Atlanta police were called to the restaurant on a complaint that a man was sleeping in a car blocking the drive-thru lane as customers waited in line. Police say he failed a field sobriety test and then began to fight as the officers tried to arrest him.

Previously released bystander video showed Brooks grappling with two officers on the pavement, throwing punches, and grabbing one of the officer's tasers. The other officer fires his taser at Brooks, which appears to have no effect, and Brooks sprints away.

The newly released surveillance video shows Brooks fleeing across the parking lot from officers, and turning and pointing something at the police, which the GBI said was the stolen police taser. 

An officer then drops the taser that he had fired at Brooks, retrieves his service gun from its holster, and fires at Brooks. 

Previously released bystander video shows Brooks in a scuffle as officers tried to take him into custody in a parking lot of a Wendy's on University Avenue at around 10:30pm on Friday.

Brooks is seen in the video getting away from the grasp of two police officers and running away from them in the parking lot. He managed to take a Taser from one of the officers before trying to run away.

One of the officers is seen getting up and giving chase with what appears to be a Taser. 

Moments later, gunshots are heard, though Brooks or the officers are not seen at that point in the bystander video. 

The shooting came at a time of heightened tension over police brutality and calls for reforms across the U.S. following the May 25 death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Atlanta was among U.S. cities where large crowds of protesters took to the streets.

A crowd of demonstrators gathered Saturday outside the Atlanta restaurant where Brooks was shot. 

Gerald Griggs, an attorney and a vice president of Atlanta's NAACP chapter, estimated there were 150 people protesting at the scene as he walked with them Saturday afternoon.

'The people are upset,' Griggs said. 'They want to know why their dear brother Rayshard Brooks was shot and killed when he was merely asleep on the passenger side and not doing anything.' Shields, the ousted police chief, said in a statement: 'For more than two decades, I have served alongside some of the finest men and women in the Atlanta Police Department. Out of a deep and abiding love for this City and this department, I offered to step aside as police chief.'

'APD has my full support, and Mayor Bottoms has my support on the future direction of this department. I have faith in the Mayor, and it is time for the city to move forward and build trust between law enforcement and the communities they serve,' Shields continued.

Georgia Bureau of Investigation Director Vic Reynolds said his agents worked through the night interviewing witnesses and reviewing video. 

He said their findings show that Brooks tried to fight off two officers when they tried to arrest him and at one point managed to take a Taser away from one of them.

A security camera recorded Brooks 'running or fleeing from Atlanta police officers,' Reynolds said. 'It appears that he has in his hand a Taser.'