
Heâd never gotten into a fight. His teachers liked him. He was a good kid.
Thatâs how Dieu Ho described her son, Tommy Le, the 20-year-old Vietnamese American student who was fatally shot by a King County sheriffâs deputy last month.
Leâs older brother, Quoc Nguyen, recalled that he and Tommy went suit shopping two weeks before the police killing. Le had planned to wear the suit at Nguyenâs upcoming wedding.
âItâs unfortunate we had to use that suit for his funeral,â Ngyuen said. âHe was a kind, sweet kid and he had plans for the future. He wanted to make a positive change in this world.â Hours before he died on June 13, Le was set to graduate from an alternative high school in South Seattle. He had recently finished reading "Faust" and "The Count of Monte Cristo."
More than 100 people gathered at a forum in Mount Baker Wednesday evening to raise and answer questions about Leâs death. Members of the audience, addressing a panel of elected officials, challenged the official police narrative of Leâs death, asked why officers werenât equipped with body cameras, and questioned why King County officials first reported that witnesses said Le brandished a knife when the shots went off, before later clarifying that he only had a pen.
King County Sheriff Urquhart, who is running for re-election, said he plans to ask the FBI to conduct its own investigation of the shooting. He also stated that police departments should not investigate officer-involved shootings within their own ranks.
Urquhart disputed that Le did not âthreatenâ to hurt anyone, repeating the departmentâs narrative that Le attacked two people with a knife prior to three deputies arriving on the scene.
On June 14, the day after the shooting, the King County Sheriffâs Department reported that three deputies responded to a call from Burien after a homeowner fired warning shots to defend against Le, who allegedly chased him with a âknife or some sort of sharp object in his hand.â
The department claimed that after deputies arrived on the scene, they ordered Le to drop the item he carried. Le did not drop the item, the department claimed, and began advancing towards the deputies. Two deputies deployed their Tasers to no effect. One of them, Cesar Molina, shot Le, killing him.
Nine days later, the department updated its official story to clarify that Le held a pen, not a knife, when he died. Urquhart said during the forum that the department believes Le originally attacked the homeowner with a knife, but returned to his home to put the weapon away as officers arrived on the scene. Leâs home is 10 houses down from the homeowner he allegedly attacked, Urquhart said.
âHe didnât have the weapon,â Jeffery Campiche, an attorney representing Leâs family, told The Stranger after the forum. âThere was no real harm to anyone.â In addition to representing Leâs family during an upcoming inquest hearing, Campiche said he also plans to file a federal civil rights lawsuit over the shooting.
Urquhart also addressed why the department does not have body cameras, saying they are âtoo expensive.â He asked the King County Executive as well as the county council for funding to equip officers with the technology.
Deborah Jacobs, director of the Office of Law Enforcement Oversight, the King County body established to provide community-based oversight for the sheriffâs department, said that body cameras arenât a panacea for police accountability. She urged the crowd to âgoogle New York Times, body camerasâ to get an idea of the equipmentâs limits.
Bob Hasegawa, a state senator currently running for mayor of Seattle, addressed a failed initiative that would have changed language in the stateâs police accountability law, deemed by some the most restrictive in the nation, lowering the bar to prosecute officers who kill. Currently, officers who use deadly force get âde-facto immunityâ from prosecution unless they acted with âwith malice and without a good faith belief."
A new initiative, I-940, would also remove the âmaliceâ clause from state law, as well as mandate mental health and de-escalation training.
During a period allotted for questions and comments from the public, a man who said he served for 14 years as a police officer in the South Vietnamese army spoke at length through a translator. The room fell silent as he spoke.
â[As] police officers, our job is to protect the citizens regardless of who they are, in accordance with the law. We cannot see the community as a battlefield,â the man said. âAim at the sky. Shoot at someoneâs leg to immobilize them. But resist every temptation in yourself to shoot and kill because it will have repercussions for the rest of your life.â