Bexar
County Officer suspended after shooting
SAN ANTONIO (KXAN) - A Bexar county sheriff's office deputy
is suspended for ten days after he shot and killed an unarmed motorist
after a minor car crash in San Antonio.
Bexar County Sheriff's Office public information officer
Paul Berry says the off-duty officer left his job as a security guard in the
early morning hours on Saturday. Soon
after, the deputy and another man apparently had a minor car crash.
According to
Berry, the two pulled over and started
arguing. It's unclear whether the argument turned into a physical fight. Berry
says the officer feared for his safety, pulled out his weapon and fired
multiple shots, hitting and killing the other driver.
Berry says the officer was wearing his uniform
at the time, and he says the other driver was unarmed. Both men have not yet
been identified.
The investigation is ongoing, but the deputy keeps his badge and his
weapon while the investigation is open.
Fairfax
County cops execute another unarmed man
The Fairfax County Police shot an killed an unarmed man who
was alone in his home. The police caused the situation, they escalated the
situation and they handled it poorly and are expected to take several weeks to
develop their justification story.
Police
said they were responding….in force with a tank, a helecopter, a SWAT team, K-p
units, and no less than 23 cops to a “Domestic dispute” but
Geer was alone in the house. The victim of this police shooting this time was John
Geer, age 46, a kitchen installer with no history of violence had to end in
death. He left behind two teenage
daughters.
According to Geer’s father, Geer had been throwing his estranged wife’s
belongings, she is 24 years old, into the front yard because she was leaving
him, so she called the cops who marked the call as a domestic dispute. She was
asked if there were guns in the house and she said there was. The weapons were
under lock and key
There's a Maura Harrington listed at the same address where the
killing took place.
Neighbors recalled him as even-keeled, outgoing and helpful.
A search of police records in Fairfax County showed that Geer was found guilty
of drunken driving in 2010 but no convictions for violent crimes or more
serious offenses. A neighbor said he talked to Geer in the minutes before the
police encounter. He said that Geer didn’t say anything suicidal but he was
deeply shaken about the impending breakup.
For forty minutes the cops demanded that Geer, who stood at
his front door, for forty minutes "They just continued to tell him: come
out, come out, come out," said one witness.
Geer had not showed the cops any sort of weapon nor had he advanced
toward them. He made no mention of harming himself or others. Geer’s hands were
up in the air, seconds before he was gunned down because they were on top of
the storm door. He as shot in the chest while slowly lowering his hands. He had
no weapon in his possession and there was no weapon within his reach.
Shot in the chest, Greer pushed his way back into the house
and bled to death. The heros from the SWAT team entered the house by way of
tank one hour later and found Geer dead.