Black student asks his mother: Why did the police shot me?

Black student asks his mother: Why did the police shot me?

A black school boy asked his mother: "What did I do?" After he was shot by police officers, whom he called to protect them from a violent former partner.

Aderria Murry, 11, from Indianola, Mississippi, was shot into his chest by an official who was "his gun at the end", the Washington Post quoted the lawyer of the family.

Nakala Murry, the boy's mother, said after her son was shot, he asked her: "Why did he shot me? What did I do?" and started crying.

The Murry family calls for the dismissal of the official who has been transferred to paid administrative leave.

The boy who was released from the hospital was treated for a collapsed lungs, a torn liver and broken ribs.



An official from the Indianola Police Department arrived at the scene after the boy called the emergency number 911 and "pulled his weapon on the front door", Ms. Murry told Cnn.

She said she said to her son that he should call the police after the father of another of her children had arrived in her house and had "angry".

The shootout felt like "one to two minutes" after the officer asked the person present to get outside, Ms. Murry told CNN and noticed that the official opened the fire when her son turned around the corner of the Fluhe.

Mrs. Murry, who told the official that nobody was armed, said it was impossible for him to know "whether it was a man, a boy, a pig or a cow" whom he shot.

"He wouldn't have known it because he shot so quickly," she said.

The 11-year-old was fulfilled of his request to raise his hands, she said and added: "I can't understand why." The same policeman who told him to leave the house. [Aderria] did it and he was shot. ”

"I will never trust the police again"

Carlos Moore, the family's lawyer, said at a press conference: "What are you waiting for? Someone who actually dies?"

Mr. Moore told the Washington Post that the events were difficult to process for the boy and added: "He will never trust the police again."

He claimed that the allegedly involved civil servants had previously been named the "best official" of the department.

Ron Sampson, police chief of Indianola, did not react immediately to inquiries from the Washington Post after a comment.

Bailey Martin, a spokesman for the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation, told the Washington Post that the authority did not comment on the case, but will notify the Mississippi General Prosecutor's office as soon as the examination has been completed.

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Source: The Telegraph

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