Los Angeles to Pay $2 Million to the family of a Cameroonian Shot by the police three years ago

The city of Los Angeles will pay almost $2 million to the family of a homeless Cameroonian male who was fatally shot by police in 2015 in a videotaped incident that went viral.

The Los Angeles City Council in a 12-2 vote on Tuesday approved the $1.95 settlement that had been reached in May.

Charly “Africa” Keunang, 43, a native of Cameroon with a history of mental illness, was shot five times by police outside his tent on a sidewalk in LA’s Skid Row homeless district.

Footage of the March 1, 2015 incident captured on a cell phone by a bystander was viewed by millions after it was posted online, prompting angry protests over police tactics.

Charlie Beck, the Los Angeles police chief at the time, defended the shooting as justified and city officials declined to file criminal charges against the officers involved, saying they had acted in self-defence.

In May of this year, a federal jury found two of the officers liable for financial damages in Keunang’s death.

Keunang, who was unarmed, was shot after police responded to a call about an attempted robbery.

Video footage showed how the encounter quickly escalated and turned deadly after a rookie officer shouted that Keunang had a gun. The settlement will go to Keunang’s parents and his sister.

SOURCES: News18

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