African American Elected Officals (major areas)
Latino/Hispanic Elected Officials (ALL)
Asian American Elected Officials
Contact The BrownWatch
Search BrownWatch


Powered by Squarespace
Amazon Honor System Click Here to Pay Learn More

Recommend Del Norte County Sheriff shooting death of Unarmed Black Man Probed (Email)

This action will generate an email to the person below recommending this article. Your email address, and the email address of the person you are sending this article to, are not logged by our system.

EmailEmail Article Link

The email sent will contain a link to this article, the article title, and an article excerpt (if available). For security reasons, your IP address will also be included in the sent email.

Article Excerpt:
Del Norte County Sheriff Dean Wilson has released the name of the deputy who shot and killed a man on May 16 earlier on the Hwy. 199 Hiouchi Bridge over Smith River. Meanwhile, retired English teacher Greg Jones, of Brookings, the father of Eric Jones, 27, who died at the scene, feels that perhaps unnecessary force was used. He said that it’s likely his son was not armed, and so he wonders why lethal force was used in the incident. His son was shot twice; and one of his two dogs also was shot twice. Eric Jones was a graduate of Brookings-Harbor School District. He suffered from a bipolar condition, his father said. The victim was hit with one shot in his abdomen and one in a shoulder with a “downward trajectory into his torso,” said Mike Riese, Del Norte County D.A. Riese said that his office’s investigation will take weeks, and may come down to determining if Deputy Ramsay Williamson had time after shooting the dog to transition into the use of nonlethal force against Jones. Eric Jones, after leading officers on a chase 199 on May 16, allegedly ordered his dog to attack a deputy from Del Norte County Sheriff’s Office (DNSO). “Unfortunately just because someone is unarmed does not mean they aren’t imposing a real threat,” Wilson said. He said that Williamson was carrying a Taser at the time of the shooting, but that it wasn’t clear whether he had a baton or pepper spray too. “Most of our officers carry mace, a Taser and normally a baton,” the sheriff said.


Article Link:
Your Name:
Your Email:
Recipient Email:
Message: