Miami Police Sergeant Arrives On Scene And Fatally Shoots Man Seconds Later During Routine Traffic Stop;

A fam­i­ly is left dev­as­tat­ed after a rou­tine traf­fic stop turned dead­ly for Antwon Cooper, 35, of Miami who was shot by a Miami police offi­cer at point-blank range on March 8. Police claimed Cooper had a gun, but the fam­i­ly says sur­veil­lance video from a near­by school tells a dif­fer­ent story.

Attorneys for Cooper’s fam­i­ly, Rawsi Williams and Frank Allen, say Cooper was dri­ving a red Nissan Altima that belonged to a friend, but when police ran the license plate that prompt­ed a traf­fic stop. Cooper pre­sent­ed an ID but not a driver’s license, which led to the offi­cer ask­ing Cooper to step out of the car.

Once Mr. Cooper exits the vehi­cle, the offi­cer starts a pat-down on one side of Mr. Cooper. He reach­es out to pat down the left side, and Mr. Cooper turns to run away, but the offi­cer grabs Mr. Cooper by the shirt. He doesn’t even make it any­where,” Williams said.

As Cooper was try­ing to run away, a strug­gle ensued between hIm and the offi­cer until anoth­er sergeant arrived at the scene.

[The sergeant] walks up to the scene, says ‘get down, get down,’ and just shoots Mr. Cooper in the head,” Williams said of the moments when the sergeant arrived.

[The sergeant yelled] ‘Get down, get down,’ bam, at a pret­ty close prox­im­i­ty. The kid didn’t have a chance to respond,” attor­ney Frank Allen added of Cooper’s final moments.

Williams says police framed the inci­dent as if Cooper had a gun and threat­ened the offi­cers. She says she does not know who the gun belonged to but reit­er­ates that Cooper nev­er bran­dished a gun through­out the encounter.

They put out a nar­ra­tive as if the offi­cer was forced to fire because of some kind of lethal threat by bring­ing in the word gun,” Williams said.

Mr. Cooper was not swing­ing at this offi­cer, he was not punch­ing this offi­cer, he wasn’t kick­ing this offi­cer, he wasn’t bran­dish­ing any weapons at this offi­cer, he wasn’t point­ing a weapon at this offi­cer,” Allen said of the dead­ly police encounter.

Williams says sur­veil­lance video from a near­by school will help prove police should not have shot Cooper. “The sergeant wasn’t wear­ing a body­cam, but thank­ful­ly this occurred right out­side a school and they also had video sur­veil­lance on the out­side their school that points direct­ly at the scene where this occurred so we’ve seen that footage as well,” Williams said.

Williams says the video sur­veil­lance has not been made pub­lic yet, but a pho­to shows the end result, Cooper left lying in the street.

Atlanta Black Star sought more details from Miami police on the inci­dent, but a spokes­woman says because the case is under inves­ti­ga­tion by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement and inter­nal affairs, they can­not release any information.

Cooper’s fam­i­ly just held his funer­al over the week­end. The fam­i­ly intends to file a wrong­ful death fed­er­al civ­il rights law­suit under sec­tion 1983 claim­ing Cooper was a vic­tim of exces­sive police force.

They want the offi­cer ter­mi­nat­ed, they want the offi­cer arrest­ed and con­vict­ed for the killing of Mr. Antwon Cooper,” Williams said the fam­i­ly hopes to get out of the pend­ing lawsuit.

Cooper has a crim­i­nal record dat­ing back to 2006 which include armed bur­glary, home inva­sion, and gun charges result­ing in him serv­ing prison time. Williams says he had a job and was work­ing on turn­ing his life around before his run-in with police on March 8.