Florida Cops Kill Black Man Who Pulled Over With Car Trouble — And Then Refuse To Tell Family Why

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WholeLottaGangSyht;8450705 said:
@illedout

@texas409

@"Like Water"

you niggas aint shit you a aint toting dicks on these pigs killing our people

the black race aint got time for you internet cowards.....ill beat the fuck out of a off duty cop

do the research im from des moines iowa we been killing edomite scum tweakers with our bare hands in broad day

@TheGOAT

@BoogaSuga

Des Moine nigga? Lmao
 
Beech Oss Neega;8452208 said:
WholeLottaGangSyht;8450705 said:
@illedout

@texas409

@"Like Water"

you niggas aint shit you a aint toting dicks on these pigs killing our people

the black race aint got time for you internet cowards.....ill beat the fuck out of a off duty cop

do the research im from des moines iowa we been killing edomite scum tweakers with our bare hands in broad day

@TheGOAT

@BoogaSuga

Des Moine nigga? Lmao

tumblr_n7t1yd2I6F1qjpqono1_250.gif


 
http://www.usnews.com/news/us/artic...mise-of-fair-probe-in-florida-police-shooting

Doubts linger amid promises of fair investigation in Florida police shooting of black drummer

GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — Politicians were nearly booed off the stage at a rally when they promised a full and fair investigation into a police officer's fatal shooting of a black man who played the drums in churches and bands and worked as a public housing inspector.

The crowd of several hundred people gathered Thursday at Palm Beach Gardens City Hall to call for justice in the killing of 31-year-old Corey Jones and they grew restive when Palm Beach County Mayor Shelley Vana pledged the probe would provide answers.

"We do care and the bottom line is, this county must come together in love, peace and transparency," Vana said. "We as county commissioners believe every life matters."

Many in the crowd were far from convinced that the Palm Beach Sheriff's Office and the top prosecutor, Dave Aronberg, will do a thorough investigation into the actions of Palm Beach Gardens Police Officer Nouman Raja. The investigation is likely to take months. A police officer hasn't been charged with a crime in the county for shooting someone in the line of duty since the early 1990s.

The Rev. Sylvester Banks Sr., a well-known local pastor and Jones' grandfather, said the community will be closely monitoring the case and its outcome.

"Just because one policeman corrupts himself, is it right for the rest of the police force to cover it up?" he said to the crowd.

"No!" they responded.

"If he has done wrong, let him face his wrongdoing," Banks said.

Jones was shot to death early Sunday by Raja, who stopped his unmarked van to check on what he thought was an abandoned vehicle along Interstate 95 and was confronted by an "armed subject," police have said. Jones had a gun he had legally purchased, but family attorneys said they were told by investigators that he never fired a shot.

Raja fired six shots and hit Jones three times, family attorney Benjamin Crump told reporters.

Details of exactly what happened have not been released by police. Raja's van didn't have a dashboard camera and the department's officers do not wear body cameras, the chief said.

The Jones shooting has plunged his family and the community at large into the ongoing national debate about police use of force, particularly in cases involving African-Americans. At the rally, people wore "Justice 4 Corey Jones" T-shirts and many carried signs making reference to other police shootings of black people around the country.

"This is really only the beginning," said Howard Williams, a local activist and friend of Jones. "Do not give up the fight. I'm not going to stop until we get justice."

Jones was a musician who performed with local bands and had just left a gig early Sunday when his car broke down. A fellow band member tried unsuccessfully to jumpstart the car, then left Jones to await a tow truck along a dark ramp on I-95 in Palm Beach Gardens, an affluent city north of West Palm Beach.

Jones' family said he may have thought he had to defend himself when Raja approached.

Jones was running away at some point, but there's no evidence he was shot in the back, Crump said. His body was found 80 to 100 feet from his car.
 
http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news...shooting-this-is-not-a-moment-its-a-mo/nn7jn/

Had the officer who shot his grandson been a child in his house, Bishop Sylvester Banks told a crowd of several hundred people Thursday, he would have gotten answers quickly and dealt with him accordingly.

Had he been a member of his church, he said, then the members of the congregation would have forced him into accountability or made him leave.

Speaking to the crowd who gathered for a rally demanding answers for 31-year-old Corey Jones’ death Sunday at the hands of Palm Beach Gardens police officer Nouman Raja, Jones’ grandfather punctuated the calls for a transparent investigation from politicians and civic leaders with a demand for investigators.

“Don’t cover up his sins,” Banks said.

In the 90-minute peaceful protest that included singing, praying and calls for justice behind an empty drum set assembled as a visual reminder of Jones’ absence, several local leaders urged the crowd to keep up their intense call for change, calling the push for an investigation into Jones’ death a marathon run.

Jones’ vehicle had broken down on the southbound off-ramp of PGA Boulevard and Interstate 95 early Sunday morning. Raja, who had approached Jones on the exit ramp, shot and killed him after a brief confrontation where Raja said Jones also had a gun. Civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, who now represents Jones’ family, said Jones was in his vehicle when Raja approached him in an unmarked white van with tinted windows. The van wasn’t flashing any emergency lights, he said.

In the aftermath of cases like Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., Jones’ death Sunday has quickly emerged as the newest national case in the discussion of police officers’ use of deadly force.

Civil rights activist Rev. Al Sharpton on Wednesday said he would be getting involved in the case, as Crump during the rally revealed to the crowd that Jones had been shot three times.

“It’s unfortunate that it took someone so great to die so that we can make change. But we are going to make change,” Jones’ best friend, Rev. Clarence Ellington, III, told the crowd who cheered in response.

Rae Whitely, a member of the Boynton Beach Coalition of Clergy and one of the organizers of the movement said that the family will keep going until they get answers.

“This is not a moment, it’s a movement,” he said.

Signs such as “Equality for All” and “Justice for Corey” dotted the crowd.

Numerous family friends also praised Jones spirit and goodwill.

Friends described Jones as a peaceful man who would have never been confrontational with police. Palm Beach County Commissioner Priscilla Taylor and other leaders asked why Raja, who was in plainclothes, would have approached him without a badge or any other identifying markers in the darkness.

“We need to get rid of crooked cops!” one woman from the crown shouted in response.

A few boos from the crowd came when Palm Beach County Commissioner Shelley Vana said “all lives matter,” but it was a sentiment Jones’ older brother, C.J. Jones, repeated.

Banks spoke for about 20 minutes, finishing his sermon to the cheers “We want justice!”

Palm Beach County Sheriff’s deputies are conducting an investigation into the shooting, but leaders on Thursday drew cheers from the crowd when they said that wasn’t good enough.

Despite the calls for justice and emotional speeches, the rally was peaceful, beginning with a rendition of “We Will Overcome” and closing with another song “Lean on Me” as supporters held hands in a final prayer.

“Keep the beat alive for Corey Jones,”Crump repeated over and over, a reference to the 31-year-old’s passion for playing the drums.
 
Preach2Teach;8445067 said:
The plan is to get rid of the police then bring in the feds as the main dictatorship, if that ever happens then America will be truly fucked, don't let em fool you, for all we know this could be another false flag? don't get angry at me, just throwing it out there.

You damn right that's what happening. They want the Feds to police the public, and their doing it at the expense of black ppl. We are being used as pawns so they can implement a police state
 
Trillfate;8450843 said:
stringer bell;8448162 said:
http://m.wpbf.com/news/officer-shot-at-corey-jones-five-times-two-separate-instances/35942092

Exclusive: Source details officer's account of fatal shooting | Local News - Home

PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. -

Early Sunday morning, a Palm Beach Gardens police officer shot and killed Corey Jones.

Jones' car had broken down on the PGA Boulevard exit ramp.

According to a Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office source who can’t comment publicly, the account Palm Beach Gardens officer Nouman Raja told investigators is that Jones pulled a gun on him as soon as Raja approached him on the exit ramp from I-95 and said, “Police. Man, are you alright?”

Raja said he then fired two to three shots at Jones, who was standing behind his open driver’s side door. He said Jones then took off running.

Raja told investigators he was tracking Jones as he ran, and saw him make it to the guardrail west of the car, about 30 feet away.

The source said Raja said he could see the flickering silver of a laser on Jones’ gun, and that’s when he took aim and fired two more times.

Raja was working an undercover surveillance detail on burgled cars, and pulled up to Jones in a white unmarked passenger van, perpendicular to the front of Jones’ car.

He was wearing jeans, a tan T-shirt and a ball cap. He did not have his duty gun on him, but a smaller, back-up Glock in a front holster. The duty gun was in the van.

The source said Raja told detectives Jones was standing, and Jones immediately said, “I’m okay.”

Raja said he then identified himself as police, and that’s when Jones pulled out his gun, and Raja immediately shot at him.

Raja had left his police radio in the van, and called 911 on his cell phone as he tracked Jones running away.

According to the source, evidence technicians found five casings from Raja’s Glock 40 at the scene.


They also found a Jimenez Arms 380 semi-automatic pistol, with six live rounds in the magazine, which apparently belonged to Jones.

The Palm Beach Gardens Police issued a statement Monday that said Jones suddenly confronted Raja with a gun, and that’s when Raja fired.

The Jones family issued the following statement Tuesday:

“Our family would like to thank all of those who have reached out in support regarding the tragic death of our beloved Corey. Corey Jones was a God-fearing man who dedicated his life to doing the right thing. He lived every moment to the fullest and was an inspiration to many; the kind of son, brother and friend people could only hope for. Rest assured, we are working diligently with our legal team to determine exactly why this plainclothes police officer in an unmarked car would approach Corey. We will never forget Corey. We are hopeful that the memory of his smiling face will give us strength during this incredibly difficult time.”

Rev. Al Sharpton has been invited to attend a peaceful protest on Thursday.

That pigs story doesn't add up to me...

3am.

+

Undercover/plain clothes/unmarked car = you're regular fucking person to a man who is STRANDED

Charge the negligent pigg with Murder. Guilty.

To add to that

I've never seen a marked or unmarked police vehicle stop a car whether manned or unmanned without flashing lights to identify who they are.

Something as simple as flashing blue lights could have simply deescalated the situation. If Cory Jones was unsure of the plain clothes THUG he would have had the opportunity to call 911 to identify him if he so choose.

 
Why do these families keep getting the same damn lawyer? The same lawyer that's lost cases like this twice.
 
twizza 77;8455304 said:
Corey's Brother says he don't see color but yet acknowledges his white wife. smh... It was like he was trying to make white people/media feel comfortable. See we don't hate "White people" here's my white wife as proof.

https://facebook.com/TheRickPartyShow/videos/967594616612485/

The more he talks, the more reason he's giving them to let the cop off the hook. Then watch a family member speak out and tells the cop: "We forgive you".
 
Antlerz;8455447 said:
twizza 77;8455304 said:
Corey's Brother says he don't see color but yet acknowledges his white wife. smh... It was like he was trying to make white people/media feel comfortable. See we don't hate "White people" here's my white wife as proof.

https://facebook.com/TheRickPartyShow/videos/967594616612485/

The more he talks, the more reason he's giving them to let the cop off the hook. Then watch a family member speak out and tells the cop: "We forgive you".

Yeah, its shaping up to be that way. Half the footage story is in a church and his family has a big presence in the church community.
 
It's clear that his brother isn't woke yet.

He is still being brainwashed by the system.

Since I am in Florida, maybe I can reach out to him somehow.

This shit is sadder than a bitch.
 
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/10/23/us-florida-shooting-idUSKCN0SH2MC20151023

FBI to help Florida sheriff probe police shooting of black musician

The Florida sheriff investigating a plainclothes police officer's fatal shooting of a black musician asked for federal assistance on Friday to "ensure the highest level of scrutiny and impartiality."

The Palm Beach Sheriff's Office, facing public criticism for its handling of prior officer-involved shootings, said in a statement that the Federal Bureau of Investigation had accepted the request in the case of Corey Jones, a 31-year-old drummer who was shot early Sunday.

It said the decision was made "to provide the family of Corey Jones and the community with a thorough and accurate investigation."

Local politicians and activists say the Palm Beach Sheriff's Office has lost the public's trust and that the FBI was already looking into one 2013 incident.

They are calling for the U.S. Department of Justice or the Florida Department of Law Enforcement to investigate the killing of Jones, shot dead by a Palm Beach Gardens police officer after his car broke down on a highway exit ramp as he drove home from a gig.

"There are so many questions, lots of holes. People want an independent investigation and not locally done," said Priscilla Taylor, a Palm Beach County commissioner who has led calls for community oversight of the police.

Palm Beach Sheriff Ric Bradshaw announced the FBI's review of an unspecified case in May, after the Palm Beach Post and WPTV NewsChannel 5 revealed that, following a year-long investigation, the law enforcement agency had determined that all but one of 45 deadly deputy-involved shootings since 2000 were justified.

The case under FBI review is believed to be that of an officer of Asian descent who shot an unarmed black man riding a bike in 2013.

In that case, video shows Dontrell Stephens running and falling to the ground as, off camera, four shots are fired and an officer comes into the frame standing over him with a gun.

His injuries left Stephens paralyzed from the waist down. The officer, Adams Lin, was cleared of any wrongdoing in the incident and promoted to sergeant in June.

Bradshaw has said he welcomed the federal inquiry but has also dismissed critics of his office.

"This is a simple equation," he said in a video address to a police gala in July. "If you don’t try to shoot us, if you don’t try to stab us, you don’t try to run over us with a car, and you don’t try to beat us up, then everything’s going to be fine."

Jones' death was the latest in a string of fatal incidents involving police and black men across the United States that have sparked outrage and fueled questions about excessive use of force by officers.

In its announcement on Friday, the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office recognized the uneasy national climate. "There have been many lessons learned from the tragic events that have occurred across the United States and there is nothing more important, now, than a comprehensive investigation process so we can ensure justice is served," it said.

Police say there was a confrontation with Jones, who was carrying a licensed handgun, after officer Nouman Raja, 38, pulled up in an unmarked van.

Raja shot six times, hitting Jones with three bullets, while Jones did not fire his weapon, the drummer's lawyers told reporters Thursday after meeting the state attorney who is investigating the incident.

Bradshaw last spring announced efforts to improve his agency's internal reporting procedures for officer-involved shootings "to provide greater accountability." Bradshaw also created Citizen Advisory meetings to bring together police and community leaders.

A group of mostly black Palm Beach County lawyers said, however, that any findings in the Jones case by the sheriff's office would be tainted by its handling of past cases.

"We know the history and we don't like it," said Byrnes Guillaume, a former prosecutor and president of the F. Malcolm Cunningham, Sr. Bar Association.
 
http://www.cbs12.com/news/top-stories/stories/vid_30428.shtml

Trayvon's mom on Corey Jones death: "They need to figure out why they keep shooting us" - WPEC-TV CBS12 News :: News - Top Stories

Story by Kathleen Walter/CBS12

WEST PALM BEACH (CBS12) -- Hundreds turned out for an emotionally charged Town Hall meeting at Tabernacle Missionary Baptist Church on 8th Street in West Palm Beach.

They were concerned citizens, elected leaders, clergy and police making a very powerful statement: what happened to Corey Jones should happen to no one.

Amongst the backdrop of the stained glass windows in one of the city’s oldest African American churches, there were songs, prayers and pledges of a fight for Corey Jones.

Sheila Banks, the aunt of the late Corey Jones said, “Everyone is concerned. Everyone is concerned about Corey and his situation. We want justice for Corey.”

Among those in attendance, a woman who knows the pain all too well: Sybrina Fulton, the mother of the late Trayvon Martin.

She told the crowd, “A lot of times, we look at these situations and try to figure out why they happen. We don’t need to figure out our end. They need to figure out why they keep shooting us.”

She said, “We need to change those mindsets that think it’s OK to shoot and kill somebody and then go home and sleep in their bed. We need to change those mindsets.”

More than 300 people turned out for the meeting organized by the F. Malcolm Cunningham Sr. Bar Association of African American lawyers. The purpose of the gathering was to update the public on the investigation into Jones' death and give a voice to those who are concerned.

For many here, it was the first time they learned that--upon the request of Palm Beach County Sheriff Ric Bradshaw-- the FBI will investigate Jones’ death.

Darryl Parks, an attorney for the Jones family said, “You got to ask... What took six days to make that decision? You got to ask.”

Guillaume Byrnes, the President of the F. Malcom Cunningham Sr. Bar Association said, “Whatever the result is.. we want it to come from someone who the community thinks is fair and impartial. So, we think it’s a good thing”

Chief Clarence Williams of Riviera Beach tonight and Palm Beach County Commissioner Priscilla Taylor indicated that an independent, civilian review board was needed to police local police agencies.
 
http://www.mypalmbeachpost.com/news/news/local/vana-doesnt-know-whats-matter-all-lives-matter/nn876/

Vana doesn’t know what’s the matter with ‘all lives matter’

I was trying to explain to Palm Beach County Mayor Shelley Vana why she got booed for saying “all lives matter” at the rally for Corey Jones last week.

But she was in denial.

“My message is that everyone matters, and I will continue to think that,” she said. “As a mayor, that’s what I say. Sometimes, a leader leads, and that’s what I’m doing.”

And sometimes a leader is tone deaf.

Vana was a rare white face on stage at Thursday’s “Rally for Answers” outside the Palm Beach Gardens Police Department. The mostly black crowd had gathered to embody the fear that the investigation of last weekend’s police shooting of Jones, a 31-year-old stranded motorist, would be geared more toward exonerating the officer than getting to the truth of why Jones, who is black, was killed.

Some in the crowd waved “Black Lives Matter” signs, which has become a rallying cry for those calling for closer scrutiny of police-involved shootings of young black men.

So when Vana addressed the crowd by telling them, “all lives matter,” it sounded to some that she was offering up a rebuttal to the central theme of the gathering.

“That’s why they booed,” I told her. “It’s not what you said. It’s what they heard.”

Vana said she was only saying what Jones’ brother had said.

Yes, but Jones’ brother is black, and in this case, context is everything.

“You ought to watch Fox News,” I told her. “You can hear a lot of people saying ‘all lives matter’ on Fox. It’s what white people say when they want to minimize or ignore the experiences of black people.”

Vana launched into her family history, as she did after getting booed, talking about her multi-cultural family.

“I’m not doubting your sincerity,” I said. “I just think you’ve got a real blind spot.”

But she dug in.

“I don’t change my message,” she said.

Sheesh. She really doesn’t get it.

“You ought to talk to more black people,” I told her. “They might be able to explain it better.”

People like Michael Brown, a black lawyer who served eight years at the mayor of Riviera Beach.

What does Brown hear when white people say “all lives matter”?

“It’s a dog whistle kind of thing,” Brown said. “You’re sending a coded message to people that ‘black lives matter’ is wrong. Shelley Vana should know that.

“If you’re an elected official in the second largest county east of the Mississippi and you pretend you don’t understand the significance of this, I question whether you’re able to think critically in the way a leader should.”

Brown said that Vana might better understand the slight if she thought of this in gender terms, instead of racial terms.

Women understand they’re held to a different, and often, unfair standard, he said. Imagine if every time a woman talked about women getting a fair shake in the work world, men just said they didn’t want to make this a male-female issue.

“So why wouldn’t she understand that ‘black lives matter’ is acknowledging an obvious problem?” Brown said.

And if that gender example doesn’t work, I’ve got another way of looking at it, a way that South Floridians might better understand.

Consider the manatee, the sea mammal that became endangered due to boaters who race through inland waterways with their boat propellers slicing up the manatees.

Now, imagine that you really want people to know that the manatees need our help in the form of boater education and slow-speed zones.

“Save the manatees,” you start telling people to make them aware of the problem.

Think how frustrating it would be if when you say, “Save the manatees,” people look back at you and say, “Save all the sea creatures.”

You might say, “Wait, I don’t think you understand. There’s an immediate problem with manatees here. These boat propellers are not chewing up dolphins, snappers or crabs. This is about doing something to address a specific problem that pertains to a specific sea creature, the manatee. We need to save the manatees.”

But all you get in response is: “I don’t see why we have to single out manatees. We should just save all the sea creatures.”

Faced with that kind of feedback, you might get the idea that the people saying this really don’t care about manatees.

This is why Vana got booed.

And for a reason she still doesn’t understand.

“The day that ‘all lives matter’ is ill-conceived is the day I quit,” she said.
 
This sounds like some slave catcher type of shit.
blackamerica;8453776 said:
Preach2Teach;8445067 said:
The plan is to get rid of the police then bring in the feds as the main dictatorship, if that ever happens then America will be truly fucked, don't let em fool you, for all we know this could be another false flag? don't get angry at me, just throwing it out there.

You damn right that's what happening. They want the Feds to police the public, and their doing it at the expense of black ppl. We are being used as pawns so they can implement a police state

Lol at "implement" a police state. We are already living in a police state dumbass
 
http://opinionzone.blog.palmbeachpo...ronberg-has-chance-to-prove-his-independence/

Corey Jones shooting: Aronberg has chance to prove his independence

Judge me by my words and my actions, that our only loyalty is to the public,” said Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg.

Aronberg, speaking publicly for the first time since the shooting death of Corey Jones, told The Post Editorial Board Monday that his “commitment is to the public. It’s not to an agency; my commitment is to the public, and to act independently and fairly.”

But at news conferences, rallies and town hall meetings, the public repeatedly questions the state attorney’s independence.

This may well be his best opportunity to answer those questions.

You see, Corey Jones could have been anyone that night. But he wasn’t. He was a 31-year-old black man with two jobs and no criminal record. His tragic death takes place in the current national environment of frustration surrounding police-involved shootings of black men — from Tuscon, Ariz. to Ferguson, Mo., to North Charleston, S.C.



However, just as significant is palatable frustration and well-deserved skepticism locally about Aronberg’s ability to impartially investigate our police agencies, given his history with Sheriff Ric Bradshaw’s office. In April, The Palm Beach Post and WPTV NewsChannel 5 looked at more than 250 incidents in which police officers fired guns in Palm Beach County and the Treasure Coast. The shootings killed 86 people and wounded 97. Almost all of the shootings, upon investigation, were deemed to be justified — 97 percent.

No officer has been criminally charged in an on-duty shooting in Palm Beach County since 1993. Aronberg took office in 2013, and has since faced at least 20 cases and cleared police in all of them. Among the officers he declined to indict was Deputy Adams Lin, who shot and paralyzed an unarmed Dontrelle Stephens in September of that year, sparking national outrage.


Moreover, Bradshaw has inextricably tied himself to Aronberg. During a defiant speech at a Police Benevolent Association gala over the summer, the sheriff made a point of thanking Aronberg, calling him “one of those good people who have stood up lately and been the person that’s been counted on to do the right thing.”

Aronberg insisted Monday on his office’s independence. That he and Bradshaw are not joined at the hip. He said, for example, that some of the police shooting cases were taken to a grand jury but no charges were filed.

“We prosecuted a cop — this is just recently, just now, for armed sex battery. We’ve done perjury … We’ve done domestic battery, theft,” he said. “Since I’ve been here, DUI, aggravated battery … official misconduct, organized scheme to defraud. These are all cases we prosecuted against police officers, showing our independence.”

Yet in the days following Jones’ shooting, state and local leaders called that independence into question. As early as last Tuesday, the Florida Legislative Black Caucus was pushing for FDLE to step in. At that time, even Jones’ grieving family was having difficulty getting information about the investigation into the popular drummer’s death.

By last Thursday’s huge #RallyForAnswers in Palm Beach Gardens, speaker after speaker rotated between pleading for calm in the wake of the shooting, demanding transparency and pushing for an “outside” agency or prosecutor.

On Friday, Bradshaw announced that the FBI would be joining his investigation into what caused Officer Nouman Raja to shoot Jones, who was waiting for a tow truck around 3 a.m. on Oct. 18 after his car had broken down on the southbound exit ramp of I-95 and PGA Boulevard. We commend Bradshaw for his decision.

It’s all the more reason why it was difficult to understand why Aronberg appeared to turn a deaf ear to the community’s request to let FDLE handle the investigation.

His focus, he told the Editorial Board Wednesday, has been on the Jones’ family and their needs.

That’s fine, but as state attorney, he answers to all 1.3 million residents of Palm Beach County. And many of them have sounded a clarion call for fairness and transparency that will lead to a just outcome — regardless of whether that results in charges against Raja.

It is Aronberg’s job to assure them of that.
 
Last edited:
http://theinsider.blog.palmbeachpos...ting-probe-focuses-on-second-volley-of-shots/

Corey Jones shooting probe focuses on second volley of shots

Investigators looking into the death of Corey Jones are focusing on officer Nouman Raja’s decision to shoot the 31-year-old drummer while he was running away, The Palm Beach Post has learned.

Evidence indicates Jones may have dropped his weapon when the Palm Beach Gardens officer fired the fatal shot, according to interviews with Jones’ family, their lawyers and a source with knowledge of last week’s incident, which has captured national attention.

At its heart: Why was Jones’ gun found so far away from his body?

When Raja pulled up to the scene at about 3:15 a.m. Oct. 18, in plainclothes and an unmarked white van, Jones was on the phone with AT&T roadside assistance, his cellphone call log indicates. But Jones got out of the vehicle with his legally purchased gun, police and lawyer statements show.

That prompted Raja to fire multiple shots at Jones, police said. It’s unclear whether any of the rounds from the first volley of shots hit him, but it caused Jones to run away.

That’s when Raja fired a second set of shots.

In all, Raja fired six shots, three of which hit. When and where Jones was struck is crucial.

One of the bullets shattered his left arm. Jones was left-handed, so he likely would have been carrying the gun in that hand. That bullet could have forced him to drop it immediately.

Another bullet struck Jones’ right arm, near the shoulder. That wound wouldn’t have been fatal.

A third bullet struck Jones in his right torso, tearing his aorta, which carries blood from the heart. That bullet would have killed him — and, with his aorta shattered, likely forced him to drop immediately to the ground.

If he were still armed when the fatal shot struck, the gun would have been near his body. But it wasn’t. It was about halfway between Jones and his car, family lawyer Skinner Louis said — about 40 to 50 feet from his body. Louis was briefed on the investigation by the State Attorney’s Office.

Another critical question is where Raja was standing when he fired both volleys.

During his walk-through statement to investigators, he couldn’t clearly say where he was when he fired, according to Louis and one other source.

“Where Raja was placed is very important,” Louis said Tuesday, since it could indicate the angle at which he fired, revealing whether Jones had turned toward the officer.

Raja told investigators at the scene that he fired the second set of shots because he saw a “flickering sliver of a laser,” an unidentified source told WPBF-Channel 25 last week. So even if Jones had dropped his weapon as he fled, the officer may have believed Jones was still armed and continued to fear for his life, causing him to unleash the second volley of shots.

Jones’ death has triggered an extraordinary investigative effort for an officer-involved shooting in Palm Beach County, involving four agencies, including the FBI.

The State Attorney’s Office, for example, usually relies heavily on the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office investigation in shootings. But it has investigators going to extraordinary lengths to find witnesses, reaching out to everyone who stayed at a wing of the Doubletree Hotel near the shooting scene that night, The Post has learned.

The State Attorney’s Office and PBSO have refused to comment on details of the investigation.

On Tuesday, Raja met with police union lawyers while PBSO investigators removed evidence from his personal vehicle, according to WPTV NewsChannel 5.

The family’s focus on Tuesday, Louis said, was to get answers from AT&T, which Jones called six times to summon a tow truck to the Interstate 95 off-ramp at PGA Boulevard. The phone records show Jones made his final phone call at 3:10 a.m., five minutes before he was shot and killed. That call, which records show lasted 53 minutes, might have been recorded.

Louis was a high school friend of Jones’ and is now part of the family’s legal team, which includes Tallahassee-based civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump.

AT&T officials on Monday confirmed to The Post that they are cooperating with law enforcement but declined to comment further.

Family attorneys also expected Tuesday to speak with Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg. They initially met with him last week, and prosecutors provided them details of the shooting. Based on that conversation, they believe Raja wasn’t using his department-issued weapon when he shot Jones.

A Rally for Transparency is scheduled outside the State Attorney’s Office at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday.

Louis said the phone logs belie Raja’s account, and that Jones was laid-back, and calm even as he tried over and over again to reach a tow truck operator. He refused an offer of help from his brother, C.J., in a call that started at 2:52 a.m.

“He wasn’t angry, he wasn’t agitated. He just thought maybe he was calling the wrong number,” Louis said of Jones’ long wait to speak to someone from roadside assistance.

The family has many questions about the case, Louis said, but “Some questions may never be answered.”
 

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