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Emantic
Fitzgerald
Bradford
Jr., 21
of
Hueytown
was
running
away
from the
scene of
the
shooting
at the
Riverchase
Galleria
in the
Birmingham
suburb
of
Hoover
when he
was shot
and
killed
by
police
at the
Alabama
mall on
Friday.
(Photo
by
LiveLeak.com) |
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Protesters
march
after
death of
man who
wasn’t
mall
shooter
By
KIM
CHANDLER
APNews.com
HOOVER,
Ala. -
Protesters
on
Saturday
marched
through
an
Alabama
shopping
mall
where
police
killed a
black
man they
later
acknowledged
was not
the
triggerman
in a
Thanksgiving
night
shooting
that
wounded
two
people.
An
officer
shot and
killed
21-year-old
Emantic
Fitzgerald
Bradford,
Jr. of
Hueytown
while
responding
to the
Thursday
mall
shooting.
Police
said
Bradford
was
fleeing
the
scene
with a
handgun.
Hoover
police
initially
told
reporters
Bradford
had shot
a teen
at the
mall,
but
later
retracted
the
statement.
“We
knew
that was
false,”
said
stepmother
Cynthia
Bradford
when she
heard
police
were
blaming
him for
the
shooting.
She
described
her
stepson,
who went
by E.J.,
as a
respectful
young
man
whose
father
worked
at a
jail for
the
Birmingham
Police
Department.
Hoover
Police
Captain
Gregg
Rector
said
investigators
now
believe
that
more
than two
people
were
involved
in the
initial
fight
ahead of
the
shooting,
and that
“at
least
one
gunman”
is still
at large
who
could be
responsible.
Police
said
while
Bradford
“may
have
been
involved
in some
aspect
of the
altercation,
he
likely
did not
fire the
rounds
that
injured
the
18-year-old
victim.”
Rector
said
police
regret
that
their
initial
statement
about
Bradford
was not
accurate.
The
shooting
remains
under
investigation,
including
whether
Bradford
played
any role
in the
initial
disturbance,
The
unanswered
questions
stirred
emotions
in the
suburb
outside
the
majority-black
city of
Birmingham.
More
than 200
demonstrators,
including
several
relatives,
chanted
“E.J”
and “no
justice,
no
peace”
as they
marched
past
Christmas
shoppers
at the
mall.
They
held a
moment
of
silence
at the
spot
outside
a shoe
store
where
Bradford
was
killed.
Family
members
described
their
horror
of
finding
out from
social
media
that
Bradford
was
dead.
Video
circulated
on
social
media of
Bradford
lying in
a pool
of blood
on the
mall
floor.
Speaking
to The
Associated
Press on
Saturday
night
from his
family’s
home,
Bradford’s
father
Emantic
Bradford
Sr.
called
his son,
“a good
kid, a
very
good
kid.”
Bradford
Sr. said
his son
had a
permit
to carry
a weapon
for
self-defense.
He said
he
doesn’t
know
exactly
what
happened
at the
mall,
but said
it was
hurtful
that
police
portrayed
his son
as the
shooter.
“They
were so
quick to
rush to
judgment.
... I
knew my
son
didn’t
do that.
People
rushed
to
judgment.
They
shouldn’t
have
done
that,”
Bradford
Sr.
said.
Family
members
said
they
plan to
ask to
see body
camera
footage
from
officers.
Hoover
police
have not
confirmed
to the
AP
whether
such
footage
exists.
Carlos
Chaverst,
an
activist
in
Birmingham
who
organized
the
protest,
said
that
when
authorities
acknowledged
that the
person
killed
was not
the
actual
shooter,
“that
sent us
in an
uproar.”
More
protests
will be
held in
the
future
to hold
officials
accountable,
he
added.
“When we
found
out
about
this
incident,
there
were
questions
from the
jump.
People
were
upset
because
a man
was shot
and
killed
by
police
in our
own
backyard,”
he said.
The
incident
began
Thanksgiving
night
with a
fight
and
shooting
in
suburban
Birmingham
at the
Riverchase
Galleria,
a mall
crowded
with
Black
Friday
bargain
hunters.
An
18-year-old
man was
shot
twice
and a
12-year-old
bystander
was shot
in the
back.
Hoover
police
said
Friday
morning
that the
girl was
in
stable
condition.
The
Alabama
Law
Enforcement
Agency
is
investigating
the
incident
since it
is an
officer-involved
shooting.
The
Hoover
Police
Department
is
conducting
its own
internal
investigation.
The
officer
who shot
Bradford
was
placed
on
administrative
leave
while
authorities
investigate
the
shooting.
The
officer’s
name was
not
released
publicly.
The
officers
were not
hurt.
Video
posted
on
social
media by
shoppers
showed a
chaotic
scene as
shoppers
fled.
A
witness,
Lexi
Joiner,
told
Al.com
she was
shopping
with her
mother
when the
gunfire
started.
Joiner
said she
heard
six or
seven
shots
and was
ordered,
along
with
some
other
shoppers,
into a
supply
closet
for
cover.
“It
was
terrifying,”
Joiner
said.

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