"The U.S. Department of Justice says it will continue a "The Civil Rights Division of the Department of Justice, the United States Attorney's Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation have been monitoring the investigation that has been conducted regarding the death of Tamir Rice on Nov. 22, 2014. Tybre Faw, who befriended civil rights icon John Lewis, talks to CNN's Don Lemon about speaking at Lewis' funeral in Atlanta. This was a drive-by shooting. “We talked probably briefly about it, just making sure we were OK.”The attorney for Tamir’s family, Subodh Chandra, pointed to the “inconsistencies” in the various statements.“The inconsistencies among the officers’ video-recorded statements, their prewritten and un-cross-examined statements to the grand jury, and the video of the shooting underscore how important it is for the city to finally hold these officers accountable,” Chandra said.“The Rice family hopes that city officials at long last comprehend that Clevelanders deserve far better than having these two incompetent individuals continue to carry guns and badges.”In his video interviews, Garmback says he prepped his rookie partner on what to expect for a “gun run.”“I tell him ‘This is a gun run, what would you do in a gun run?’ He starts, ‘I’d get out of the car, I’d be in a certain stance,'” Garmback says. Cleveland.com first reported on the videos, which were provided to CNN by an attorney for the Rice family. Tamir had been in a park in Cleveland, playing with a borrowed air gun. At one point, Garmback says he drove up to the park and spotted “the kid,” who turned to face the police vehicle.“At this time, I can hear Patrolman Loehmann yelling, ‘Show me your hands, show me your hands, show me your hands!’ I can see through here, the kid reaching, pulling–” Garmback says.Garmback then abruptly stops talking, covering his face with his hands.“I didn’t know it was a kid,” he says. Not — Not really,” he says. Loehmann was an Independence Police Officer for five months before he joined Cleveland, and had a clean disciplinary record at that department, as well.He graduated from Benedictine High School and lives in Parma.Rice died Sunday of his injuries after the officer shot him.

'”Twice in the interview, Garmback breaks down in tears and becomes emotional. "It is unheard of, and highly improper, for a prosecutor to hire 'experts' to try to exonerate the targets of a grand jury investigation. The victim's family had this to say in "It has been clear for months now that the Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy McGinty was abusing and manipulating the grand jury process to orchestrate a vote against indictment.
The officer and his training partner were responding to a report of someone with a gun.

“I can see this kid’s eyes rolling in the back of his head.”© 2020, Tiloben Publishing Co., Inc. All rights reserved. Loehmann says that he loudly told Tamir to “freeze” and put his hands up.However, Loehmann later wrote in statements to the grand jury that he started to open the door and yell at Tamir as the car slid to a stop.In Loehmann’s interview, authorities asked him if he had spoken with Garmback since the shooting to “rehearse” their statements.“Um.
Loehmann shot him twice just seconds after exiting the car.Loehmann and Garmback both said in written statements dated November 2015 they thought Tamir was pulling out a real gun.

In 2016, Hillary Clinton lost the electoral college but won the popular vote over Trump by 2.8 million votes. The department posted on its Facebook page March 3: Loehmann had no disciplinary record at the Cleveland Police Department. Of course, both of those questions are important if your primary interest is in punishing police officers for these incidents. When the officer arrived, police said, he told Rice to raise his hands, and the boy reached for his waistband, they said.