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The deputy, whose name authorities have not released, yelled at Glass
“Get out of the car. He said, “Get out of the car.” “That’s a legal demand. Get out of the car right now, or you’ll be kicked out of here.”
Glass said, “I’m afraid… You’re not making yourself clear to me. I don’t know why I have to go out.”
Less than three minutes later, the deputy yelled again, “Get out of the car!” and threatened to break the window.
In the body camera footage, Glass can be seen putting her hands together in a prayer position and saying, “Lord, please don’t let them break the window!”
Six minutes after the call, the deputy saw Glass’ knife and pulled his gun. Glass threw the knife to the other side of the car and raised his hands.
Glass does not appear to be a threat to himself or anyone else. He told police he was “smoking,” but didn’t ask any other questions.
Glass remained inside the vehicle with the windows rolled up throughout the altercation. He can be seen showing the officers a heart with his hands.
More police showed up. At one point, police from Clear Creek, Idaho Springs, Georgetown, the Colorado State Patrol, and the Colorado Division of Gaming were all there.
A female officer told him, “Come, talk to us.” Glass made a heart with her hands on the car and then blew her kisses. “So do you,” he said, “but come out and talk to us.”
This officer approached two other female officers and joked that they had to send “cute girls” to talk to him.
At one point, a Colorado State Patrol boss radioed that Glass had done nothing wrong.
“Can you figure out what Clear Creek’s plan is? “There is no reason to contact him if he has done nothing wrong and is not suicidal, intent on killing someone, or a significant risk,” a CSP sergeant said on the radio. “Is there anything we don’t know about your health?”
But a growing number of police officers at the scene remained there for about an hour and a half, trying to get Glass out of the car. At one point, a deputy got on the hood of the car and shone a flashlight into Glass’s eyes. He stayed there for a moment and then pulled out a gun and pointed it at Glass from inside the car.
Thanks to the attorneys for the Glass family
In this still shot from a police body-worn camera on June 11, 2022 in Clear Creek County, Colorado, one officer holds a stun gun, while another officer stands on the hood of a car and points out Christian Glass is 22 years old. a gun to him. After Glass crashed her car outside Silver Plume, she called 911 for help. After arguing with the deputies for more than an hour, one of them shot and killed Glass while he was locked in his car. The mirror was holding a small knife.
As they tried to break the car window, a deputy said, “We’re poppin’.” Glass took the knife from his hand.
“Looks like he’s holding a knife!” another officer said. “Watch the crossfire, watch the crossfire.”
The officers backed up and drew their guns. In the end, they broke the window, and the glass went everywhere. The glass was holding a small knife.
As the officers approach and begin shooting bean bags at the car, Glass’s head moves from left to right.
Officers yelled “impact, impact, impact” as the bean bags flew in and apparently broke more car windows. Glass became even more angry and moved his eyes and head back and forth. He started screaming.
Another deputy tells someone to stun Glass with a Taser
The first officer to arrive on the scene tasered Glass with his yellow Taser gun. He started crying again. At this point, officers were on all sides of him with their lights on. A few seconds later, they yelled at him again to drop the knife.
A deputy shot him several rounds, killing him
“The deputies broke the windows of the car and took a knife out of the car. The suspect took a stone and a second knife and armed himself again,” he said. “Deputies used a less lethal bean bag and a Taser, but it didn’t work. The suspect tried to stab an officer in the end, and the officer shot him. On the spot, the suspect was pronounced dead.”
Monday, Clear Creek County Sheriff Rick Albers said he had nothing more to say about what happened.
Heidi McCollum, the district attorney for Clear Creek County, did not respond when asked more than once whether she was looking into responding officers for crimes of excessive force or whether she would send the investigation to a grand jury. . Attorney General Phil Weiser’s office would not comment on the incident.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation is in charge of investigating police shootings to see if there is evidence of federal crimes against civil rights. The US Attorney’s Office would not say whether or not they are looking into Glass’s death.
Glass’ parents will speak Tuesday at their attorney’s office in Denver. Glass loves tennis and plays it often. He is also a trained chef and taught himself how to draw and paint.
“These officers killed a gentle, peaceful soul simply because it was ‘time to get on with the night,'” Rathod and Mohamedbhai said, citing a body camera video of the Georgetown Police Chief telling Glass that they don’t want to stay there anymore. “From start to finish, the officers on the scene did things that were wrong and cruel. The Glass family agrees with the Colorado State Patrol’s assessment that Christian did nothing wrong, did not pose a threat to himself or others, and there is no reason to contact him.
Law enforcement agencies in Denver and Jefferson County, which is adjacent to Clear Creek County, have co-responder programs to help them assist people who may be in a mental health crisis.
Since January 2022, co-responders at the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office have assisted with 525 calls. An agency spokeswoman said Crisis Intervention Team deputies get 40 hours of mental health training each year.
Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office Karlyn L. Tilley said, “A co-responder is a mental health professional who can help deputies de-escalate a situation, help stabilize a crisis through evaluations clinical and need, and help connect people to the right mental health, substance abuse, and other services after a crisis.” “They help people in Jefferson County who are having a mental health crisis or other mental health problems by providing them with follow-up support and field responses or interventions.”
In Denver, new police officers must go through eight hours of training on how to integrate communications and tactics, eight hours of training on how to deal with active bystanders, and eight hours of training on how to respond to an assessment of danger.
All officers must complete both 40-hour Crisis Intervention Team mental health training and verbal de-escalation skills training within 18 months of hire.
This year, Stanford University did a study that showed Denver’s co-responder program, called STAR, reduces crime.
Instead of sending the police to some non-violent 911 call, it sends mental health professionals.