(Crohn) – The Santa Clara provincial lawyer office concluded that a group of San Jose Police Administration officers fired legally at a man and killed a man last year who was armed with a pistol.
Roberto Rivera, the son, 50 years old, was drunk and suicide when he entered Katracho Tuwaia on the Senter road, gave up a gun around it, and made threatening statements on September 8, 2024, and investigators at DA office wrote in a report issued on Friday.
Rivera told people in one case, “Everyone here is about to get U-VISAS”, a migration case given to some victims of violent crime. Monitoring camera video programs Rivera shot on the ceiling.
After he left the restaurant, Rivera walked to a random man sitting in a nearby truck and shot him in the neck, says the DA report. Soon after, the gunman was stopped outside the 7-Eleven store by six SJPD police officers. “For the next twenty seconds, the officers defend Rivera to surrender,” the report says.
Rivera shouted to the officers, “shot me!” According to public prosecutors.
The report says, “Rivera) The countdown began and slowly reduced his rifle and face directly to officers who placed a car to his right. At that moment, officers Cesar Fernandez, Jesse Jefford, Juan Carlos Geerez, and Brett Franic believed to be aimed at killing and killing their officers, killing two parts of the departments.
Prosecutor Rob Baker concluded that Rivera refused to drop his weapon, and to make his fiery weapon towards the officers, explained that his intention is the commitment to “suicide by the officers … he had no other choice but to employ the deadly force in defending their colleagues from their officers.”
“After Rivera Junior landed, the police sent a K9 dog to pull him out of his near weapon. He hit the dog to River Junior twice. However, the medical examiner considered that the bullets were the police and not the injuries caused by the K9 that killed the suspect,” the report.
Toxin analysis revealed that Rivera has methamphetamine in its system, and the level of alcohol in the blood was 0.18 %, according to the report.
The Public Prosecutor’s Office has been assigned to determine whether the deadly force used by law enforcement in the province is legal. Officers under the law may use deadly force if they or another person are at an imminent danger. Fernandez, Jefford, Jerice and Franic were cleared of any criminal wrong.