WATCHES - WARNINGS - AND INTERACTIVE RADAR - RIGHT DOWN TO YOUR STREET. NEW TONIGHT. THE IOWA ATTORNEY GENERAL SAYS - 3 DES MOINES POLICE OFFICERS WERE JUSTIFIED - IN A SHOOTING THAT KILLED A 16-YEAR-OLD BOY. KCCI'S KAYLA JAMES JOINS US NOW - WITH NEW INFORMATION RELEASED BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL'S OFFICE. KAYLA? THE FINDINGS OF THE REPORT STATING -- THE 16-YEAR-OLD TEEN -- KNOWN AS T.J. -- RAISED A GUN AT FOUR POLICE OFFICERS BEFORE POLICE SHOT HIM 14 TIMES. BODY CAM VIDEO WORN BY THE OFFICERS WAS USED FOR THE INVESTIGATION. LET'S DO A QUICK RECAP OF THIS INCIDENT. IT HAPPENED AT AROUND 1 IN THE MORNING ON DECEMBER 26TH -- POLICE ARRIVING AT AN APARTMENT ON EAST MCKINNELY AVENUE. THE REPORT SHOWS -- T.J.'S STEPFATHER DIALED 9-1-1 -- STATING THAT THE TEEN WAS ARMED WITH A GUN AT THE HOME. THE AG'S OFFICE REPORT STATES THE TEEN WAS ORDERED TO THE WOODWARD ACADEMY -- AND LEFT AT THE TIME. POLICE ARRIVED-- AND -- THE REPORT STATES -- THE TEEN POINTED THE GUN TOWARD OFFFICERS AS SOON AS THEY ENTERED THE APARTMENT. THE ATTORNEY GENERAL'S OFFICE SAYS POLICE NEGOTIATED WITH T.J. FOR MORE THAN FOUR MINUTES. THE TEEN SAID "I'M GOING TO DIE" LESS THAN A MINUTE BEFORE THE FATAL SHOTS - ACCORDING TO THE REPORT. POLICE AND THE TEENS FAMILY AND FRIENDS ARE REPORTED TO HAVE URGED HIM TO DROP THE GUN. T.J. IS SAID TO HAVE "ABRUPTY RAISED THE GUN" TOWARDS TWO OF THE OFFICERS. THAT'S WHEN ONE OFFICER FIRED -- FOLLOWED BY TWO OTHERS. KCCI IS WORKING TO OBTAI
Des Moines police officers cleared in teen’s shooting death
Updated: 10:12 PM CST Jan 18, 2023
The Des Moines police officers involved in the shooting death of a teen, will not be criminally charged.The Iowa Attorney General’s Office announced Wednesday, it has completed its review of the Dec. 26 shooting of the 16-year-old and found the officers were justified. The officers are identified as Noah Bollinger, Zachary Duitscher, Thomas Garcia and Nicholas Howard.The teen, identified only as "T.J.," was shot and killed inside an apartment on East McKinley Avenue. The Attorney General’s Office said it reviewed an investigation by the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, including body camera video worn by all the officers involved in the shooting. In a statement, Attorney General Brenna Bird said, "In this particular case, four Des Moines police officers entered the scene knowing a perpetrator was armed. After refusing to comply with the officers’ requests to put the weapon down, they were forced to act, protecting themselves and those around them."The report found that officers responded to a 911 call from T.J.'s stepfather, who said the teen had pulled a gun on him. Four officers responded, and found T.J., his grandmother, and a friend, inside the apartment of T.J.'s grandmother, two units away from the teen’s stepfather.According to the Attorney General’s Office, T.J. was visibly armed with a handgun and pointing it toward the officers as soon as they entered the apartment. The report said officers negotiated with T.J. for four minutes and 20 seconds. During that interaction, the report said that T.J. told officers his brother had just died, and that T.J. can be heard saying, "I want to be with my brother" and "I am going to die."The report said the officers, the grandmother and the friend, collectively issued more than 70 pleas for T.J. to put the gun down, but he did not comply.The report said that eventually T.J. "abruptly raised the gun toward both Duitscher and Howard," and that Duitscher fired the first shot. T.J. was shot a total of 14 times. Officers Bollinger, Duitscher and Garcia fired their weapons. Howard did not fire his weapon.The report said bullets hit T.J. in his chest, abdomen and head, and that "it is reasonable to believe the shots to the head occurred as T.J. was falling to the ground."T.J. did not fire his gun, according to the report.The report also revealed that T.J. had been ordered by a judge to reside at the Woodward Academy, left the facility without permission, and went to the apartment on East McKinley.The Des Moines Police Department tells KCCI that they plan to release video of the shooting.
DES MOINES, Iowa — The Des Moines police officers involved in the shooting death of a teen, will not be criminally charged.
The Iowa Attorney General’s Office announced Wednesday, it has completed its review of the Dec. 26 shooting of the 16-year-old and found the officers were justified. The officers are identified as Noah Bollinger, Zachary Duitscher, Thomas Garcia and Nicholas Howard.
The teen, identified only as "T.J.," was shot and killed inside an apartment on East McKinley Avenue. The Attorney General’s Office said it reviewed an investigation by the Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation, including body camera video worn by all the officers involved in the shooting.
In a statement, Attorney General Brenna Bird said, "In this particular case, four Des Moines police officers entered the scene knowing a perpetrator was armed. After refusing to comply with the officers’ requests to put the weapon down, they were forced to act, protecting themselves and those around them."
The report found that officers responded to a 911 call from T.J.'s stepfather, who said the teen had pulled a gun on him. Four officers responded, and found T.J., his grandmother, and a friend, inside the apartment of T.J.'s grandmother, two units away from the teen’s stepfather.
According to the Attorney General’s Office, T.J. was visibly armed with a handgun and pointing it toward the officers as soon as they entered the apartment.
The report said officers negotiated with T.J. for four minutes and 20 seconds. During that interaction, the report said that T.J. told officers his brother had just died, and that T.J. can be heard saying, "I want to be with my brother" and "I am going to die."
The report said the officers, the grandmother and the friend, collectively issued more than 70 pleas for T.J. to put the gun down, but he did not comply.
The report said that eventually T.J. "abruptly raised the gun toward both Duitscher and Howard," and that Duitscher fired the first shot. T.J. was shot a total of 14 times. Officers Bollinger, Duitscher and Garcia fired their weapons. Howard did not fire his weapon.
The report said bullets hit T.J. in his chest, abdomen and head, and that "it is reasonable to believe the shots to the head occurred as T.J. was falling to the ground."
T.J. did not fire his gun, according to the report.
The report also revealed that T.J. had been ordered by a judge to reside at the Woodward Academy, left the facility without permission, and went to the apartment on East McKinley.
The Des Moines Police Department tells KCCI that they plan to release video of the shooting.