AP/ July 25, 2012, 3:11 PM

Anaheim mayor: Feds to review police killings

(AP) ANAHEIM, Calif. - Federal officials will review two deadly police shootings that sparked a fourth day of violent protests that left downtown business heaped with shattered glass and jails full of demonstrators.

Mayor Tom Tait said Wednesday that the U.S. attorney's office has agreed to review the weekend killings and he will meet Friday with members of that office and the FBI.

"We will have a clear and complete understanding of these incidents" followed by a public dialogue on what actions should be taken, Tait said at a news conference.

The shootings and resulting demonstrations marred the image of the Orange County city, which is home to Disneyland and the Angels baseball team but also has neighborhoods teeming with gritty apartments.

Protests rage over Anaheim police shootings
More protests after police shooting in Anaheim

On Tuesday night as many as 1,000 surged through downtown, smashing windows and vandalizing 20 businesses, setting trash fires, damaging City Hall and the police headquarters and hurling rocks and bottles at patrol cars and police in riot gear, authorities said.

The violence was finally quelled at around 2 a.m., some seven hours after it began, police said.

Twenty-four people, including four minors, were arrested on suspicion of crimes ranging from failure to disperse to assault with a deadly weapon, Police Chief John Welter said at a news conference.

Video showed knots of young men and women looting a T-shirt store.

Some 300 police from Anaheim and surrounding communities were called in and riot-clad officers used batons, pepper balls and beanbag rounds.

At least six people were injured, including a police officer who was struck on the arm with a brick, a protester who was hit in the chest by a pepper ball, and three reporters who were struck by rocks and a beanbag round, police and witnesses said.

None was immediately hospitalized.

Police will examine videos of the protests to identify violent protesters and there could be further arrests, Welter said.

He and Tait said peaceful demonstrations will be permitted but they promised to crack down on any further violence.

"Vandalism, arson and other forms of violent protest will simply not be tolerated in our city," Tait said. "We don't expect last night's situation to be repeated but if it should be, the police response will be the same: swift and appropriate."

The violence erupted from a peaceful rally after demonstrators unable to get into a packed City Hall meeting blocked a nearby intersection. After several hours, police declared an unlawful assembly and moved in, Welter said.

As they cleared the street, groups of 50 to 100 people splintered off and moved through downtown, throwing rocks and bottles at police and passing motorists, Welter said.

Some set trash can fires, and a gas station was shut down after reports that some protesters were seen filling canisters with gas.

It was the fourth day of violence in the wake of two deadly officer-involved shootings.

The family of Manuel Diaz sued the city and the Police Department on Tuesday, claiming he was shot and killed Saturday while running away, lawyer James Rumm said. The family is seeking $50 million in damages.

The second shooting occurred Sunday when officers spotted a suspected gang member in a stolen sport utility vehicle. A brief pursuit ended when three people jumped from the vehicle and ran. Joel Mathew Acevedo, 21, fired at an officer and the officer shot and killed him, authorities said.

At Tuesday's City Council meeting, scores of angry residents packed the chamber. Some called for the police chief to be fired, and for creation of a civilian police oversight commission.

"I am appalled, deeply saddened, that when the Anaheim Police Department is supposedly under scrutiny they would do this now and kill two more young men," said Jaclyn Conroy, whose nephew was killed in a police shooting in 2003.

Residents said the city needs to pay more attention to poor, gang-ridden areas.

Yesenia Rojas, 35, showed councilmembers a bruise on her side, saying she got it during the police crackdown on demonstrators on Saturday.

"This is going to go away, but what I have in my head, and what I have in my heart is going to stay forever," she said

The back-to-back deaths took the tally of shootings by officers in this Orange County city to six so far this year, up from four a year before. Five of the incidents were fatal.

Welter has said that Diaz was shot after two officers approached three men who were acting suspiciously in an alley before running away. One officer chased Diaz to the front of an apartment complex.

The chief would not say what led the officer to shoot Diaz. But Welter said Diaz failed to heed orders to stop and threw something on the roof of the complex that contained what officers believe was heroin. Both officers were placed on paid leave pending an investigation.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
30 Comments Add a Comment
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bradkt1 says:
Whenever police officers think that they can do no wrong because they are the good guys, that's when they are most likely to turn into the bad guys. Police officers are entrusted by our society with the ability to take away our freedoms and our lives. No one else except the police have this awesome power.

There has been way too much of a questionable history perpetrated by police officers who shoot first and ask questions later that has been tolerated by people in the name of "public safety"...so long as their ox isn't being gored. Incidents like the ones that happened in Anaheim don't occur in a vacuum. There is always a history that led up this. This was just the spark that set things off.

I am not aking sides...yet. I am just not going to either accuse or defend these particular police officers until all the facts are in.
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pdavid24 replies:
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The fact of the matter is that there aren't nearly as many police officers as gang members. It really is up to the community as a whole to stand against gangs. Yes, things escalated out of control, at the same time the community needs to come together and cooperate with the police. Imagine the protesters stayed peaceful, ignoring the inciters and dispersed when ordered to. Then they ask for a council meeting to discuss what was happening. Instead we have 5 nights of rioting, destroyed businesses and injured people.
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BlindWillieJackson says:
Let's not cry over spilled moolies.
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thelostlegend says:
More terroristic illegals taking over the country unabated.
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godzillamonister replies:
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I would venture to say that you absolutely NO idea about the history of California which was taken by the US in a land grab in the 1840. The "illegals" are descendants of people who crossed the Bering Straits about 15,000- in my book they have a right to be anywhere on NORTH AMERICA.
thelostlegend replies:
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"California which was taken by the US in a land grab in the 1840"__________________________________________ Mexico was paid hansomly for all terriroty aquired during the war. Do some research on Google before posting lies you loser.
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justsittingin says:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oUbGqnimPOc

The shooting against the two kids were not the sole incidents that sparked this outrage.

The clip shows another demonstration, not the same one as this one that lead to the incident at the city council gathering. Something sorely needs to be done about the police in your city.
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thomasvesely says:
police departments should not have discretionary budgets that allow them to pay off victims of bad policing.
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TimeToStepUp says:
>>> LtSmily Re: Rule of Law 5:06 PM EDT ---
DOJ? Rule of Law? Not any more. Plz go to DOJ site:?http://www.justice.gov/
DOJ removed American flag from it's banner and replaced it with a quote. It's by C. Wilfred Jenks, who in the 1930's?was a leading proponent of the "international law" movement, that had as its goal to impose a?global?common law and which backed 'global workers' rights.'
"The common law is the will of?mankind,?issuing from the life of the people."
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angel4truth says:
Almost everyday police are killing innocent people, planting false evidence, raping someone, beating people, abusing minors, stealing property they confiscate, committing perjury, trumping up charges, sexually battering woman, and more. Do the research. The corruption has gone wild and out of control. It is at epidemic proportions. The crimes they commit are horrific. They have gotten away with atrocities you would never have guessed could happen in our country. Someone must do something to stop them. Someone must put an end to their reign of crimes upon American citizens. Please don't let them hurt our children anymore. Please protect our youth from being their victims. Don't let them harm our families anymore. God, this is horrible. We can't trust these predictors anymore.
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SUZAMBA replies:
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Of course, no one is ever guilty? Crime has gone wild and out of control, every where. We need stricter laws, not a slap on the wrist.
It's always the police fault. You should try walking in their shoes for a while and have to deal with all the issues they do.
And for the record, not all police officer are corrupt. That's like saying all kids are thugs!
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angel4truth says:
Almost everyday police are killing innocent people, planting false evidence, raping someone, beating people, abusing minors, stealing property they confiscate, committing perjury, trumping up charges, sexually battering woman, and more. Do the research. The corruption has gone wild and out of control. It is at epidemic proportions. The crimes they commit are horrific. They have gotten away with atrocities you would never have guessed could happen in our country. Someone must do something to stop them. Someone must put an end to their reign of crimes upon American citizens. Please don't let them hurt our children anymore. Please protect our youth from being their victims. Don't let them harm our families anymore. God, this is horrible. We can't trust these predictors anymore.
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SUZAMBA replies:
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What gives these demonstrators the right to destroy other peoples property? I suppose in your mind, they are not guilty! If you were the property owners, I bet you'd be singing a different tune! And you wonder why people are harmed! You are whacked!
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fiddlestickawshucks says:
Tell me where demonstrators have the right to destroy property and set fires to prove their point.

Only an idiot would take a child to one of these demonstrations.

Everybody wants the police to do their duty when a crime occurs against them personally, but when the police actually arrest or kill someone in the performance of this duty; these same people want to hang them.

Make up your minds.!!

You can't have it both ways.
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beancube2010 says:
If our community services in not on top of our police force, this kind of mess will rotten our government.
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