
4 minute read
NCJ Daily Online
Fatal Police Shooting in Arcata
Humboldt County Sheriff William Honsal said officers had been using de-escalation techniques for 15 minutes with an armed suspect on Mad River Road the morning of Sept. 9 when he brandished the firearm and was fatally shot.
Advertisement
Flanked by local California Highway Patrol command staff and Arcata Police Chief Brian Ahearn, and standing before a small group of reporters just up the road from where the shooting occurred, Honsal said the multi-agency Critical Incident Response Team investigation remains in its very early stages. He said it wasn’t currently known how many officers fired their weapons, how many shots were fired during the incident or how many times the suspect was hit.
“We’re not going to release a whole lot of information because we don’t know a whole lot,” Honsal said.
The sheriff said a CHP unit was the first on scene responding to a 911 call reporting a suspicious man with a firearm on Hendon Road near Miller Lane. The officer located a suspect matching the description — a white male adult in his early 30s wearing a leather jacket with a pistol in a holster on his hip — at 11:05 a.m. in the 1000 block of Mad River Road. Additional patrol cars from CHP and the Arcata Police Department also arrived on scene within minutes.
The officers tried “de-escalation techniques,” Honsal said, but the man ignored their commands and kept walking down Mad River Road toward Mad River Beach. Multiple people who live along the road told the Journal this morning they saw a slow procession of officers — some walking alongside creeping patrol cars with guns drawn taking cover behind their passenger-side doors, and others in their vehicles — following the man, urging him to drop a briefcase he was caring and follow their commands. But the man reportedly did not comply and kept walking, at times walking backward while talking to the officers, telling them to leave him alone.
This continued for about a quarter-mile, Honsal said, adding that about 15 minutes passed between officers’ first contact with the man and when they shot him. The man was pronounced dead at a local hospital 52 minutes after officers made first contact with him, according to the timeline offered by Honsal.
The shooting was captured on video from both dash-mounted patrol car and Humboldt County Sheriff William Honsal (center) prepares to brief the media at the scene of a Sept. 9 police shooting in Arcata.
Photo by Mark McKenna
body-worn cameras, Honsal said. Officers on scene had less-than-lethal weapons at their disposal, Honsal said, though whether any were used and to what extent is still under investigation.
As Honsal spoke, evidence technicians from multiple agencies — including the California Department of Justice — processed the scene of the shooting, which remained cordoned off with yellow tape, for evidence. Inside, a line of police vehicles involved in the incident — two APD patrol cars sandwiched between CHP cars — remained parked in a row, with a flurry of evidence markers and discarded emergency medical debris, sitting about 100 feet in front of the first vehicle.
Under the county’s Critical Incident Response Team protocol, the Sheriff’s Office and the Humboldt County District Attorney’s Office are co-leading the investigation, with aid from a variety of local agencies and the DOJ.
More information about the shooting is expected to be released later this week.
— Thadeus Greenson POSTED 09.09.21 Read the full story online.
Make us a part of your daily life
For the news as it develops and all you need to understand politics, people and art on the North Coast, follow us online.
Remembering Richard: North Coast residents paused Sept. 11, on the 20th anniversary of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, to remember the life of Richard Guadagno, the former manager of the Humboldt Bay National Wildlife Refuge and passenger 19A on United Flight 93, who is believed to be one of the passengers who stormed the airplane’s cockpit to prevent from reaching its intended target.
POSTED 09.11.21
northcoastjournal.com/ncjdaily northcoastjournal
Standoff Ends in Surrender: A nearly threehour standoff between police and wanted fugitive Matthew Dilley ended peacefully just before 1:30 p.m. on Sept. 10, when Dilley gave up his gun and was taken into custody. Police had held Dilley — who was armed with a pistol and wanted on warrants for charges of kidnapping, false imprisonment and other crimes — at rifle point for two hours.
POSTED 09.10.11
ncj_of_humboldt ncjournal
Del Norte Sheriff Releases Video: On Sept. 11, the Del Norte County Sheriff’s Office released body-worn camera footage depicting the Aug. 25 fatal shooting of Robert Anderson. The 38-year-old father of three — once hailed as a hero for returning a missing teenager to her home — was killed after lunging at a deputy with a kitchen knife while in mental distress in Crescent City. Read the full story at www. northcoastjournal.com. POSTED 09.14.21
northcoastjournal newsletters
Digitally Speaking
The number of hours an outside law firm has billed to date in investigating a text messaging scandal at the Eureka Police Department. Chief Steve Watson said the investigation is nearing completion. Read the full story at www.northcoastjournal.com. POSTED 09.14.21
They Said It
— A California State Parks press release on a proposal to rename its park north of Trinidad. POSTED 09.10.21
Comment of the Week
— Janice Jacques-Williams commenting on the Journal’s Facebook page on a post about the Knob Fire south of Willow Creek becoming fully contained Sept. 13 as the Hopkins Fire started in Mendocino County. POSTED 09.13.21