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Reconstruction video of patrol car shooting posted


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Updated: 8/15/2012 9:40 pm Published: 8/14/2012 4:51 pm

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. (AP) - Police in Arkansas released a video reconstruction Tuesday meant to show how a 21-year-old man who was handcuffed behind his back could have shot himself in the head while in the backseat of a patrol car.

In the video, an officer played the part of Chavis Carter, a Southaven, Miss., man who died from a gunshot wound to the temple on July 28 despite being frisked twice by Jonesboro police officers. Carter was black and both of the officers who arrested him are white, a dynamic that has generated suspicion among some members of the city's black community.

The officers stopped a truck in which Carter was riding after they received a report of a suspicious vehicle driving up and down a residential street. They arrested Carter after learning he had an outstanding arrest warrant related to a drug charge in Mississippi. Police also alleged Carter had marijuana.

In producing the video, the agency used the same type of handcuffs that were used on Carter and the same model of handgun found with Carter after he died, a .380-caliber Cobra semi-automatic. An officer of similar height and weight to Carter - 5 feet 8 inches, 160 pounds - sat in the back of a cruiser, leaned over and was able to lift the weapon to his head and reach the trigger.

"We just wanted to get a good perspective on how it could be done and the ease with which it could be done," said Jonesboro Police Chief Michael Yates.

As far as how Carter concealed the gun, Yates said it's possible he hid it in the patrol car after officers first frisked him. He was then in the car unhandcuffed until officers eventually decided to arrest him. They then conducted a more thorough search of Carter.

"It's obvious they did miss the weapon on the first search. It is likely, since he was placed into the car unhandcuffed the first time, that he had an opportunity to stash the weapon in the car," Yates said. "The second search, which was more thorough and inclusive, did not disclose the weapon either."

The incident and the subsequent investigation has prompted criticisms of the Jonesboro Police Department. Several critics came to a Monday night meeting about the department's reaccreditation.

George C. Grant, retired dean of the library at Arkansas State University in Jonesboro, asked that the reaccreditation be put on hold until the investigation into Carter's death is complete, The Jonesboro Sun reported. Grant and others also complained that Yates hasn't pushed to hire minorities. Only three of 145 members of the police force are black, the Sun reported.

Yates didn't offer a timetable for when the internal police probe would be complete. He said he's waiting for an autopsy report, a report from the state Crime Laboratory on the gun and details on Carter's phone records.

Russell Marlin, a Memphis, Tenn.-based attorney representing Carter's family, said Tuesday that he's conducting his own investigation. Martin said it was too early to give his own assessment of how Carter died, but he said Carter wasn't suicidal. Martin said he would make a statement once his inquiry is complete.

"By all accounts, he was a healthy, happy guy. There's no reason to think he would have killed himself," Martin said.

Meanwhile, the FBI is monitoring the case. The state and local branches of the NAACP have asked the Justice Department to investigate. Craighead County NAACP Branch President Perry Jackson didn't return a phone message seeking comment.

Prosecutor Scott Ellington, who will review the investigative file to determine whether any charges are warranted, said he didn't expect to receive anything before the end of the week.

Police say video and audio recordings, as well as statements from witnesses, show neither officer pulled his weapon nor fired a shot during the traffic stop. Police have refused to release those recordings, citing the investigation.

Yates said other agencies have contacted him and told of similar incidents that occurred over the years.

Less than two weeks after Carter was shot, a man shot himself in the torso while handcuffed in the back of a patrol car in Mobile, Ala. The man survived. Police who searched him found two knives but missed the gun.

Charles Ellis, a training supervisor at the Arkansas Law Enforcement Training Academy in East Camden, wouldn't offer an opinion on what happened in Jonesboro. But he said both the initial pat down and the post-arrest search should reveal any weapons.

After a pat down and once a person is under arrest, "an officer can go in and search inside the pockets and inside the shoes, any place anything may be hidden on a person," Ellis said.

 

©2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of FOX16 - Breaking News and Weather to Plan Your Day for Little Rock and Central Arkansas

dgcg40 - 8/17/2012 1:14 PM
0 Votes
first of all if you can find dope which is much smaller and lighter than a gun how can you not find the gun? second of allit seams the gun would have actually had to be in his hand before handcuffs were put on or maybe behind his back, but even still you have limited use of your hands. This still doesn't make any common sense. the use of a simulated video does nothing for me!! So they didnt even here a bang they on ly notice when they looked in the car?

pat72209 - 8/14/2012 6:01 PM
1 Vote
He may have been trying to shoot the cuffs off or one of the officers. Who knows. Like I have been saying here....Our police officers RISK THEIR LIVES every time they go on a call...the CRIMINAL should RIGHTFULLY BE RISKING HIS TOO.

itsjustme - 8/14/2012 5:46 PM
1 Vote
They had the cops react the scene. Nah, that aint biased. LOL. I do however think its funny how KLRT noted he was black and the two cops were white. But when it comes to the description of a suspect of a crime, KLRT wont tell the race.

Butch54 - 8/14/2012 5:39 PM
1 Vote
It was a recreation of what happened. What happened to the real tape. What part of reconstructed can stupid people not understand. It isn't real. It is the way they want you to believe it happened. Not Real. Fiction. Stupid to believe. They are all the same. Then there is savor. Of the flavor of where the sun don't hit. Read the head line. RECONSTRUCTION.

bat102 - 8/14/2012 5:09 PM
1 Vote
Now more comes out sounds like the little saint[which he was not] had other law problems in another state,and had drugs on his person,as far as him shooting himself on purpose who knows but him,he may have been trying ti hide the gun better in the car,looks like the police on scene didm't unholster their guns so that will shut up some of you.
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