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|    alt.culture.alaska    |    People's weird obsession with Alaska    |    51,804 messages    |
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|    Message 51,687 of 51,804    |
|    useapen to All    |
|    'This wasn't supposed to happen': Fiance    |
|    21 May 24 08:21:15    |
      XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.law-enforcement, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh       XPost: sac.politics, alt.society.mental-health       From: yourdime@outlook.com              The fiancee of a 34-year-old man involved in a fatal confrontation with       police Monday said officers came in response to a 911 call from a neighbor       because he was threatening to hurt himself and she was frightened.              Kristopher Kody Handy, 34, was fatally shot by multiple police officers       just after 2:30 a.m. outside the West Anchorage apartment he shared with       fiancee Harmony Stitt and three children.              With the front of the building lit up by police spotlights, Handy asked       for a kiss and then walked out of the apartment shirtless and carrying the       shotgun, Stitt said Friday.              Handy was dead moments later.              “This wasn’t supposed to happen,” she said. “None of this was supposed to       happen at all.”              Her account comes amid growing scrutiny of the department’s response in       the wake of home security camera footage that appears to call into       question some of the initial police descriptions of the encounter.              The shooting was the first in Anchorage involving officers wearing body-       worn cameras but police this week said they don’t plan to release any       footage of the encounter until an investigation is complete.              In a written statement on Monday, Police Chief Bianca Cross said Handy had       “raised a long gun” toward officers responding to a disturbance call       involving a man and a woman before four officers fired, killing him. She       repeated the statement in a media briefing. The statement also said       someone had told police that Handy was outside the building with a long       gun and that he received “immediate” first aid after the shooting.              The home surveillance video indicates he was inside the apartment when       officers arrived. It also shows officers not starting CPR on his body for       5 minutes, according to Virginia Miller, an apartment resident who posted       the video.              Police declined to answer most questions Friday, including whether they       were aware that Handy may have been suicidal, citing an ongoing internal       investigation and an inquiry by the state Office of Special Prosecutions.              By Friday, there was little sign of the shooting at the apartment       building. A neighbor to Handy’s unit said police had taken two pieces of a       railing struck by bullets as evidence, including near an upstairs       apartment window.              There are 8 units in the building with 27 tenants, 13 of them children,       according to Miller, who said she decided to post the graphic footage on a       newly created Facebook group called “Anchorage Police Accountability”       after hearing the chief’s description of the encounter at the Monday       briefing.              “That’s not what happened at all,” she said.              A new, slightly longer video she posted Friday shows police calling for       Handy to come out of the apartment with his hands up. He walks out,       appears to curse, and walks down a short set of stairs with something in       his right hand. He is facing away from the camera. Police fire at least 10       shots at him, and he can be seen falling to the ground. The video doesn’t       make it clear whether Handy was raising the gun.              Cross in a statement posted to the department’s website on Thursday took       the unusual step of responding to concerns raised about the video, saying       it “appears to many to differ from the initial statement we provided       regarding the event.”              In the statement, Cross also acknowledged that initial police accounts of       events are sometimes later found to be inaccurate. The information about       the raised gun came from “the initial account of a witness,” she wrote.       But the statement also said that videos don’t capture the entire event or       the “human element of those involved” including what they see, hear, and       know.              The video was captured by a security camera inside her unit, Miller said.       She said her dog’s barking woke her up before the shooting, and on her       camera she saw someone she recognized as Handy walking in the road,       clearly upset and with something in his hand but not “pointing it or       waving it around.” Then he went back upstairs into his apartment, she       said.              Miller said she thought the situation was resolved until two police       vehicles, headlights off, pulled into the driveway. She said that happened       about 90 seconds before the shooting.              Police have said the disturbance call came in at 2:01 a.m., dispatchers       were alerted that Handy had a weapon at 2:19 a.m., officers arrived at       2:21 a.m. and the shooting occurred at 2:38 a.m.              Miller said she’s watched the video at half speed and replayed it over and       over.              “I never saw him point the gun,” she said. “I never thought he was being       threatening toward police at all.”              Several residents said it was traumatizing, especially for children, to       see Handy’s body exposed for hours after the shooting with a screen placed       later in the morning that blocked the view from the road but not the       apartments. A police spokeswoman on Friday said crime scene investigators       follow procedures to gather evidence without destroying or compromising       it, and the time that takes is different from case to case.              Stitt, in an interview Friday, said she and Handy met in January 2022.       They have a 1-year-old daughter, who he loved, as he did Stitt’s three       children as well as his family, she said. She said she’s pregnant and due       in early January.              She described him as intelligent and funny, a guy with a big personality       who grew up in the villages around King Salmon and moved to Anchorage,       attending Dimond High School where he played football and basketball and       served as the mascot. He worked various jobs including at Ted Stevens       Anchorage International Airport before he got a commercial driver’s       license and drove for several companies, she said.              Stitt said things turned bad between the couple on Sunday after they got       some potentially bad news about her pregnancy that turned out to be false.       She’d planned to go to Seward Monday and Handy wanted her to stay home,       she said. He had struggled with depression that seemed to worsen in recent       days, she said. He wasn’t sleeping.              By early Monday morning, she said, Handy was talking about harming       himself. Stitt said she messaged a neighbor and asked her to call 911       because he was scaring her.              She didn’t see what happened after Handy left the unit because of the       bright lights and then police officers pushed her back into the unit so       she couldn’t see his body, Stitt said.              The gun Handy was carrying didn’t work, she said, because the firing pin       had been removed.              “I just wanted him to have help,” she said. “He didn’t want to die. This       wasn’t a man that wanted to die.              https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/anchorage/2024/05/17/this-wasnt-supposed-              [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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