This article has been updated.
MINNEAPOLIS — The mayor of Minneapolis said Monday that she requested a federal civil rights investigation into the weekend shooting of a black man by a police officer during an apparent struggle.
Mayor Betsy Hodges said she sent an email to the Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice and to the U.S. Attorney for Minnesota to ask for a civil rights investigation in the “interest of transparency and community confidence.” The state’s Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is already conducting a criminal investigation, but Hodges said the city needs “all the tools we have available to us.”
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Authorities have released few details about the shooting, which has enraged some community members after witnesses said the man was handcuffed when he was shot. Police said their initial information showed the man, a suspect in an assault, was not handcuffed. The incident sparked protests and an overnight encampment at a police precinct on the city’s north side. Community members and activists called for a federal investigation, as well as for authorities to release video of the incident and the officer’s identity.
Two officers are on paid leave, standard practice after such an incident. Police Chief Janee Harteau said the officers were not wearing body cameras. When asked if squad car video was available, she said that it was part of the investigation.
Nekima Levy-Pounds, president of the Minneapolis chapter of the NAACP, said the request for a federal investigation is a step in the right direction, “given that we do not trust Minnesota law enforcement officials to hold themselves accountable.”
Police initially said they were called to north Minneapolis around 12:45 a.m. Sunday following a report of an assault. When they arrived, a man was interfering with paramedics who were assisting the victim, police said. Officers tried to calm him, but there was a struggle. At some point, an officer fired at least once, hitting the man, police said.
Authorities have not released the man’s name, but family members identified him as Jamar Clark, 24, and said he was on life support. His father, James Hill, told The Associated Press that his son suffered a single gunshot wound over his left eye.
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Martez McKnight, Clark’s nephew, said the family “is heartbroken and traumatized by the whole event.”
Protesters demanded that the officer who shot Clark be arrested.
Protesters continue to rally for answers in the shooting of Jamar Clark by a Mpls. Police Officer. Details at 6 p.m. pic.twitter.com/kGn79ZFZEi
— KARE 11 (@kare11) November 16, 2015
“None of our children deserve to be shot and killed, and then talked about like they are animals,” Bettie Smith, whose son Quincy Smith died in a 2008 confrontation with police, said at a news conference outside the precinct.
“Unless the community steps up to help us out, it will continue. Each and every one of us out here would be held accountable if we murdered someone,” she added.
Ramona Dohman, the commissioner of the Minnesota Department of Public Safety, said the officers’ identities would be released after investigators interview them. She said these types of investigations take time, and it’s hard to predict when authorities will have answers.
Harteau said she welcomed a federal investigation.
“Everyone involved needs and deserves the truth and the facts,” she said.









