When police arrived, he
approached them -- and one shot him repeatedly, killing him on the spot. Now the officer is charged with
manslaughter. Police say he had no cause to shoot Ferrell.
"We're going to file the
necessary legal actions to ensure that we get the answers that this family
deserves, that America deserves," said the man's brother, Willie Ferrell. "This was an unwarranted, inhumane shooting."
He held down two jobs and would
call her every morning to talk for about an hour. "I can't even think of a bad
thing he had done," she said. Ferrell was a former football
player for Florida A&M University. Willie Ferrell called his
brother the "greatest man I ever came in contact with."
Police say a homeowner called 911, saying a man was knocking on her door repeatedly. Officers responded to what they believed was a "breaking and entering" call. Police say that when they got to the scene, a man matching the caller's description ran toward them.
"This is an all-American young
man who survived a horrific accident. He is crying for help and is showered with
bullets," Chris Chestnut, attorney for the Ferrell family, said on "New
Day."
Police say a homeowner called 911, saying a man was knocking on her door repeatedly. Officers responded to what they believed was a "breaking and entering" call. Police say that when they got to the scene, a man matching the caller's description ran toward them.
One of the officers fired his
stun gun. When that was "unsuccessful," another officer opened fire, police
said. Later, police learned of the car
crash. "It was a pretty serious
accident," Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Rodney Monroe said. The crash was so severe that
authorities believe Ferrell had to climb out of the back window.
Police have charged Officer
Randall Kerrick with voluntary manslaughter -- a felony. He was released Sunday
on $50,000 bond. Kerrick was one of three
officers at the scene, but he was the only one to use a gun, firing it several
times, police said.
"The evidence revealed that Mr.
Ferrell did advance on Officer Kerrick and the investigation showed that the
subsequent shooting of Mr. Ferrell was excessive," police said in a statement.
"Our investigation has shown that Officer Kerrick did not have a lawful right to
discharge his weapon during this encounter."
A charge of voluntary
manslaughter means the person used excessive force in self-defense, or carried
out the act without intent to kill. At a news conference, Monroe
said, "Our heart(s) go out to the family" and to members of the police force.
"This is never something easy."
Many unanswered questions
remain, attorney Chestnut says. "Why was this officer even with
a badge and having a gun? What are the policies and procedures? What is the
training that would allow an officer to act so irrationally, so inhumanely?"
A civil rights group scheduled a
news conference Monday to demand justice in the case. "I've gotten calls from whites,
blacks," John Barnett with the civil rights group True Healing Under God
Initiative told WSOC. "Hispanic people are concerned." The incident took place the same
weekend that police in New York City accidentally injured two bystanders while
trying to shoot an "emotionally disturbed" man who mimicked shooting a gun at
officers, authorities say.
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