Paralyzed Latino man Files Suit Against New Brunswick Police - Shooting Partially Caught on Video

From [HERE] A New Jersey man alleges in a federal lawsuit that police shot him in the back, severing his spine, as he lay motionless on the street. New Brunswick Police officials dispute Victor Rodriguez's account, and say he fired a realistic-seeming starter pistol toward bystanders. Attorneys for Rodriguez, 19, say he was already shot by police and lying face-down in the street when a second officer shot him in the spine, leaving him confined to a wheelchair for the rest of his life.

Newly released surveillance video captured a portion of the Jan. 31 shooting - the part where he is shot by officers in the leg, falls down lying on his chest and then is shot at least four more times in the back as he lays in the street. [HERE]    

According to the lawsuit, Rodriguez was approached by a gang of men who demanded his shoes. Fearing for his life, the lawsuit says, Rodriguez ran across the street and retrieved a starter pistol from his cousin’s backpack and fired two shots into the air. The crowd dispersed and Rodriguez fled the scene with the starter pistol.

According to the lawsuit, undercover officers were in the area watching.  As Rodriguez ran past the unmarked police car, the suit contends that the officer behind the wheel opened fire without warning, striking him in the legs.  Rodriguez was motionless in the street when another officer came around back of the car seconds later and fired a shot into him, according to the lawsuit.

“You’ll then see his two legs reflexively move up and it was at that point we believe he lost the use of his legs,” Rodriguez’s attorney, Alan Zegas, said. “Police have an obligation to follow the law, not violate it,” Zegas said.

Officials disputed the version of events described in the lawsuit.

Police Director Anthony A. Caputo said in a statement that Rodriguez's starter pistol was modeled after a Beretta handgun, and that he fired "the pistol in the direction of police and city residents."

Through a translator, Rodriguez’s mother, Alejandrina Rodriguez, said that “all I could think of is, hopefully God will give my son a chance to live to overcome this.”