Phoenix police name officer who killed unarmed suspect

Phoenix Police Shooting
In this photo taken on Thursday evening, Dec. 4, 2014, the Rev. Jarrett Maupin, a Phoenix leader in the Black community, speaks at Civic Space Park during a rally/ march to Phoenix Police headquarters which he organized to protest the police killing of Rumain Brisbon, an unarmed Black man. (AP Photo/The Arizona Republic, Cheryl Evans )

PHOENIX (AP) — Police on Tuesday released the name of a Phoenix police officer who shot and killed an unarmed drug suspect — a move that came just hours before activists and family members of the man planned a protest.
Officer Mark Rine, a seven-year veteran of the department, has been reassigned to non-enforcement duty pending the outcome of an internal investigation, police said.
Prosecutors will determine whether the 30-year-old officer will face criminal charges in the Dec. 2 shooting.
Police previously said 34-year-old Rumain Brisbon, who was Black, was unarmed when he was shot by a White officer investigating a tip that Brisbon was doing a drug deal inside an SUV in the parking lot of his apartment complex.
Rumain Brisbon
In this Oct. 2, 2014 photo provided by Officer Calbert Gillett Maricopa County Sherrif’s Office Media Relation Unit, Rumain Brisbon poses for a mugshot in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Officer Calbert Gillett Maricopa County Sherrif’s Office Media Relation Unit)

Brisbon failed to obey the officer’s commands and ran to an apartment where a struggle turned deadly, police said, noting that the officer mistook a pill bottle that Brisbon had been clutching in his pocket for the butt of a gun.
An autopsy has determined that Brisbon died from multiple gunshot wounds to his torso.
The Rev. Jarrett Maupin, a civil rights advocate, said he and friends and family members of Brisbon were planning a rally and march in downtown Phoenix unless police released the name of the officer involved.
A call to Maupin on Tuesday wasn’t immediately returned.
Brisbon’s 9-year-old daughter led hundreds of protesters to police headquarters on Monday night to demand transparency in the case.
The Arizona Republic reported that a police officer clad in riot gear shook the girl’s hand and said, “I’m sorry.”
The officer’s gesture “was nice but it does not bring back her father. It doesn’t change things,” said Marci Kratter, an attorney for the Brisbon family.

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