Man shot by police 20 times in own yard after mistaking mobile phone for gun

Body camera footage has revealed the moment an unarmed man was fatally shot by police in his grandparent's backyard, after they thought a mobile phone in his hand was a gun.

In the video, two officers yelled for Stephan Clark to show his hands then shouted “gun, gun, gun” moments before shooting him.

The footage does not clearly depict what the man was doing in the moments before the police fired their weapons on Sunday night in California.

The shooting happened in the backyard of the man’s grandparent’s home, where he was staying. The police did not find a gun at the scene.

The Sacramento Police Department claim the man, who was black, was seen breaking into at least three vehicles and later into a neighbour’s home. The break ins were first reported by an emergency call also released by the police.

Police drew their guns, allegedly because they thought the man was armed. Source: Sacramento Police Department
Police drew their guns, allegedly because they thought the man was armed. Source: Sacramento Police Department

The police said deputies in the helicopter saw the man break a neighbour’s sliding glass door before jumping a fence. The helicopter video does not show the alleged break-in.

It picks up as the man is running through a backyard and climbing over a fence into a neighbouring property. It shows him looking into a truck in the driveway.

The helicopter, flying over the house, then loses sight of the man. It briefly shows him in the backyard as the police are running up the driveway along the side of the house.

“Show me your hands — gun!” one officer yells, according to body camera footage. It is dark outside and a flashlight from one body camera briefly shows the backyard, but the man is not visible. “Gun, gun, gun,” one of the officers yells before they begin shooting.

Footage from the police helicopter doesn't clearly depict what he was doing before he was shot. Source: Sacramento Police Department
Footage from the police helicopter doesn't clearly depict what he was doing before he was shot. Source: Sacramento Police Department

The helicopter footage shows Clark collapsing as they shoot. It’s unclear from the helicopter and body camera video exactly how many shots were fired. Police previously said the officers fired 20 shots.

The department claimed Clark advanced toward the officers holding an object extended in front of him. The officers thought he was pointing a handgun, police said.

After the shooting, the body cam footage shows the officers taking turns reloading and keeping their guns trained on the man from a distance while they await backup.

When backup arrives, one of the officers who fired says, “We can’t see his left hand.” Another suggested getting a nonlethal weapon before approaching.

Lashunda Britt, a cousin of Stephan Clark stands near where he was fatally shot by police in Sacramento. Source: AP
Lashunda Britt, a cousin of Stephan Clark stands near where he was fatally shot by police in Sacramento. Source: AP

“Let’s hit him a couple of times with that before we uh--” the officer begins to say, though it appears the suggestion was heeded.

“What’d he have on him?” someone else can be heard asking. “Something in his hands, it looked like a gun from our perspective,” one officer says.

As several officers approach, the man is seen lying face down with a mobile phone near his head. He’s handcuffed and the officers discuss performing CPR.

The officers who fired are taken to the street, where someone says “Hey mute” and the audio cuts out. The video continues without sound for about two minutes as the officers talk.

“Based on the videos alone, I cannot second guess the split-second decisions of our officers and I’m not going to do that,” Mayor Darrell Steinberg said in a statement.

“The investigation must be completed. We need more information in addition to the video before we can render any final conclusions.”

Steinberg said appropriate questions have been raised about the protocols for using force and rendering emergency aid during police shootings and they must be answered in the investigation.

Sequita Thompson, recounts the horror of seeing her grandson Stephan Clark dead in her backyard after he was shot by police in Sacramento. Source: AP
Sequita Thompson, recounts the horror of seeing her grandson Stephan Clark dead in her backyard after he was shot by police in Sacramento. Source: AP

Authorities have not released the man’s name but a woman who said she was his fiancee identified him as Stephan Alonzo Clark, 22, the father of her two sons, ages 1 and 3. The shooting has ignited questions by relatives, activists and others after it turned out he was holding only a cellphone.

“We’re mourning right now and so we need our time to mourn,” Salena Manni, said Wednesday as the family gathered in his grandparents’ home.

“He was at the wrong place at the wrong time in his own backyard?” Clark’s grandmother, Sequita Thompson, told The Sacramento Bee . “C’mon now, they didn’t have to do that.”

The department could not say how many times Clark was hit, and the coroner’s office was not releasing information until his relatives were notified.

Both police officers are on paid administrative leave.

Clark routinely helped care for his grandparents at their home in south Sacramento, his cousin, Sonia Lewis, told Capitol Public Radio.


  • With AP