No Charges for Houston Officers who Shot Mentally Ill Latino Man

Relatives call for a meeting with HPD chief after an officer is no-billed in his Jan. 7 death

A day after a grand jury declined to indict the police officer who  fatally shot their mentally ill relative, a Houston family on Friday called for a meeting with  Police Chief Harold Hurtt. The parents and sisters of Omar Esparza want to ask about police procedures and training, their  attorney said. They want to know, specifically, why police did not negotiate longer with Esparza  before entering the house where he had barricaded himself. "They are still struggling with this," said the attorney, Carlos Leon. "This decision (to not indict  the officer) brings back everything, and they go through (the shooting) all over again like it  happened yesterday." A Harris County grand jury Thursday cleared Rodney D. Chaison Jr., a five-year police veteran,  of any wrongdoing in the Jan. 7 fatal shooting of Esparza, 21. Chaison shot the Lamar High  School graduate when he refused to comply with the officers' demands and charged at them  with a hammer, police said. The fatal confrontation occurred after police had been on the scene for two hours, attempting  to calm Esparza. The dead man's parents, sisters and other relatives clung to framed photos while Leon told  reporters outside their east Houston home that they are disappointed by the grand jury's  inaction. The Houston Police Department issued a statement Friday about the case. The statement states that, in the face-to-face meeting, Esparza "threatened to hit the officers  in the head with the hammer and door lock. ... In an attempt to get control of the situation, a  plan was devised to enter the residence with the intention of using the minimum force  necessary to gain control of the situation."But Esparza refused to comply with the officers' demands. Officers shot him with a bean bag,  then fired and missed with a Taser, before fatally shooting him after he moved in a  "threatening manner." The message in this case, Leon said, seems to be that Houston residents should "think long  and hard" before they call police about a mentally ill family member. The Esparza family will likely file a civil lawsuit against the city, Leon added. [MORE]