Family of man killed in BB gun case sues police, Walmart

The family of a man who picked up a BB gun for sale at an Ohio Walmart and was shot dead by police has filed a federal lawsuit claiming that the corporation and police are responsible for his wrongful death.

John Crawford III was black, and his family’s lawyers Tuesday mentioned Eric Garner, Tamir Rice and Michael Brown as they announced the suit — evoking cases that have stirred international outrage because the three were also black and killed by police officers.

Grand juries chose not to indict officers in those cases, just as they decided not to indict police involved in Crawford’s death in Beavercreek, Ohio.

The shooting happened August 5. Crawford was shopping at Walmart and picked up a BB gun that wasn’t packaged and had been sitting on the store shelf for two days, the Crawford family’s lawyers said Monday.

Attorney Michael Wright said his legal team filed a federal civil lawsuit against two police officers; Beavercreek’s police chief; the city of Beavercreek and its police department; and Walmart.

The two officers are Sgt. David M. Darkow and Officer Sean C. Williams, who is also “involved in the only other fatal police shooting in the history of the Beavercreek Police Department,” according to the lawsuit.

The officers and their attorneys couldn’t be immediately reached for comment Tuesday.

An Ohio grand jury decided in September not to indict the police officers.

But Beavercreek City Manager Michael Cornell and police Chief Dennis Evers have requested that the FBI review the case to determine whether there were civil rights violations.

The Justice Department is investigating the case.

“Mr. Crawford never used, loaded, or pointed the pellet rifle at anyone, was doing nothing improper or illegal, and never caused any harm or acted in a manner that would cause any reasonable person to believe that he may cause harm,” the suit said.

Williams and Darkow were responding to a 911 call about “a gentleman walking around with a gun in the store,” pointing it at people and “waving it back and forth,” according to a recording of the call.

The suit contends that the two officers “failed to take steps to assess whether any of the information provided by the 911 caller or dispatcher was accurate before Williams shot and killed Mr. Crawford, though they had an obligation to do so.”

When the two officers located Crawford, “he was talking on a cell phone held in his right hand, with no other customers in his vicinity, and with his left side and back visible to the two police officers. Mr. Crawford was holding the Pellet Rifle in his left hand pointed down at the floor,” the suit continued.

Williams shot and killed Crawford “approximately one second after Defendant Williams or Darkow first made contact with him,” the suit said. “As a result, Mr. Crawford was shot before he even had time to react to the officer’s presence, much less to comply with any verbal commands Defendants Williams or Darkow may have made.”

The Crawford family is seeking at least $75,000 in compensatory damages and an unstated amount for punitive damages, the suit said.

The family alleges, among other things, that the police officers did not use due diligence to determine that Wright wasn’t a threat; that the officers didn’t give him enough time to put down the weapon; and that Walmart was negligent because the air rifle had been resting on a shelf, unpackaged and unsecured, for at least two days, the family’s lawyers said Tuesday.

The suit also accuses the police chief of failing to properly train and supervise the two officers.

Crawford was the father of a baby son, Jayden, born last March, the suit said.

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