2024 Minneapolis shooting | |
---|---|
Location | Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. |
Coordinates | 44°57′39″N93°16′47″W / 44.960887°N 93.279610°W |
Date | May 30, 2024 c. 5:15 p.m. (CDT) |
Attack type | Mass shooting, shootout, double-murder |
Weapons | 9mm Glock 26 semi-automatic pistol [1] |
Deaths | 4 (including the perpetrator) |
Injured | 3 |
Perpetrator | Mustafa Ahmed Mohamed |
On May 30, 2024, a mass shooting occurred in the Whittier neighborhood of Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. Four people were killed by gunfire: two civilians, Minneapolis Police Department officer Jamal Mitchell, and the gunman Mustafa Ahmed Mohamed. Three other people were injured by gunfire.
The shooting began on the evening of May 30, 2024. [2] Residents at an apartment building near the intersection of Blaisdell Avenue and West 22nd Avenue in Whittier, a neighborhood south of downtown Minneapolis, [3] [4] heard four or five gunshots. [2] A bystander overheard a woman say that her boyfriend and another man had been shot. [2]
At about 5:15 p.m. CDT, [5] Minneapolis Police Department officers responded to reports that two people had been shot inside an apartment. [5] [6] Several police vehicles and ambulances arrived at the scene at about 5:20 p.m. [7] Jamal Mitchell, an officer of the Minneapolis Police Department, was among the first responders to arrive at the scene. He was heading to the apartment building when he stopped his car about two blocks away. He said via a radio transmission that he observed two men with injuries, who were later identified as a wounded bystander and Mustafa Ahmed Mohamed. [8]
Mitchell exited his police vehicle and approached Mohamed, who was sitting on the ground next to a parked vehicle on the 2100 block of Blaisdell Avenue. [4] [5] [8] Mitchell asked Mohamed if he needed assistance. Mohamed pulled out a handgun and shot at Mitchell at close range. Mitchell fell to the ground and was incapacitated. [4] [8] [9] Two other officers who arrived at the scene observed Mohamed repeatedly firing at Mitchell. Mohamed shot at the two officers, who then exchanged fire with him. [8] One of the officers was struck by gunfire. Mohamed was killed at the scene. A 38-year-old civilian sustained critical injuries while driving through an intersection on his way home from work. He was caught in the crossfire during the shootout. [4] [5] [8] [10]
Other police officers entered the apartment building and found two gunshot victims, a deceased person and another with life-threatening injuries. [5] In response to the active shooter [11] situation, police officers evacuated the building and kicked in several apartment doors in a search of the building. [12]
Two civilians were killed by the initial gunfire inside the apartment building. Osman Said Jimale, a 32-year-old man, was found dead inside an apartment. According to the Hennepin County medical examiner, he had died of multiple gunshot wounds. [5] [6] Mohamed Bashir Aden, a 36-year-old man from Columbia Heights, was found inside the same apartment with life-threatening injuries and he was transported to a hospital. [5] [10] Aden died on June 7, 2024, from complications relating to multiple gunshot wounds, according to the medical examiner. [13]
Two Minneapolis police officers and a firefighter with the Minneapolis Fire Department were struck during an exchange of gunfire. [5] Mitchell, a 36-year old police officer [4] was transported from the scene to nearby Hennepin County Medical Center where he died that night. According to the Hennepin County medical examiner, his death was the result of multiple gunshot wounds. [5] [14] The other police officer was treated at the hospital for non-life threatening injuries and released within a few days. [4] [8] The firefighter sustained non-life threatening injuries. [15] A civilian bystander was also critically injured by gunfire. [16] [15] [10]
Authorities identified Mustafa Ahmed Mohamed (October 4, 1988 [17] – May 30, 2024), [2] [8] a 35-year-old Minnesota resident, as the gunman who shot at Mitchell multiple times and was subsequently killed in an exchange of gunfire with police. [2] [5] [4] [9] [8] At the time of the shootout, Mohamed had two active warrants for his arrest and he was ineligible to carry a firearm. [18] [19] [2] Mohamed had been convicted of state burglary charges related to incidents in 2006 and 2007. He received a four-year sentence and was put on probation. In 2008, he was convicted of a state burglary charge in Minnesota and for violating the previous terms of his sentence; he received a 1½-year sentence that ran concurrently with his prior convictions. [19] [18] In 2009, he was convicted for vehicle tampering in Missouri, and back in Minnesota a few years later, Mohamed was convicted of federal charges in 2015 for felony possession of a stolen gun and received an eight-year sentence. He left prison in 2020 and was put on supervised release. [18] In 2022, Mohamed was arrested after reports of a robbery in downtown Minneapolis when he was allegedly seen with a firearm, which violated the terms of his prior state sentence. [2] [19] [18] Mohamed was released from custody on a non-cash bond while awaiting pending state criminal charges. Warrants were issued for his arrest when he failed to appear for a court hearing. [18]
Mitchell died as the Minneapolis Police Department was struggling to fill its ranks and improve public trust. [20] [21] At the time of his death, Mitchell was working a mandatory overtime shift assigned to a one-man squad. The shootout that led to his death occurred a few days after the fourth anniversary of the 2020 murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer and the protests over racial injustice and police brutality that ensued. The city had become the center of the "defund the police” movement, though a ballot measure to abolish the city's police department failed in 2021. [20] [21] Mitchell's death was also part of an upward trend in reported attacks on law enforcement officers in Minnesota. [21] Mitchell became the third Minnesota law enforcement officer to be killed in the same year, following the two officers who were killed in the suburban Burnsville shooting in February 2024. [21]
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) was the lead government agency that investigated the incident. [5] At a press conference on the evening of the shooting, BCA superintendent Drew Evans who viewed a video of the incident, described Mitchell's death as the result of an ambush-style attack. [7] [14] Police chief Brian O'Hara said Mitchell had stopped to help a man who appeared to be injured, but who instead shot him. [14] The BCA released a preliminary report on June 2, 2024. The report said Mitchell was shot and killed by Mohamed and that two other officers exchanged gunfire with Mohamed killing him at the scene. [8]
Minneapolis Police Department officers held a vehicle procession for Mitchell when his body was transferred from Hennepin County Medical Center to the Hennepin County medical examiner's office on the night of the shooting. A memorial was placed outside the Minneapolis Police Department's fifth precinct station. [5] Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey, police chief O'Hara, U.S. Representative Ilhan Omar, and several elected officers officials made public statements honoring Mitchell as a heroic figure. [9] [4] [5] Several Minneapolis city councilors who were critical of the police department released statements about the shooting that did not use Mitchell's name or note that a police officer had been killed. [22] Minnesota Governor Tim Walz ordered flags in the state to be flown at half-staff on May 31, 2024. [23] Michell's death was compared to the last two Minneapolis police officers killed in the line of duty, Jerry Haaf in 1992 and Melissa Jayne Schmidt in 2002. [21]
A public memorial service for Mitchell was held on June 11, 2024, at Maple Grove Senior High School. O'Hara posthumously awarded Mitchell a Medal of Honor and Purple Heart. Mitchell is to be buried in his home state of Connecticut. [24]
Michael Orville Freeman is an American attorney and politician who served as the county attorney for Hennepin County from 1991 to 1999 and again from 2007 to 2023. While in office, he was the official responsible overseeing several high-profile criminal cases of excessive police force, including several unlawful killings by law enforcement officers. Freeman filed criminal charges against Derek Chauvin and three other Minneapolis police officers responsible for the murder of George Floyd in 2020, before the Minnesota Attorney General's office took over the case.
The Minneapolis Police Department (MPD) is the primary law enforcement agency in Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States. It is also the largest police department in Minnesota. Formed in 1867, it is the second-oldest police department in Minnesota, after the Saint Paul Police Department that formed in 1854. A short-lived Board of Police Commissioners existed from 1887 to 1890.
On November 15, 2015, two police officers fatally shot Jamar Clark, a 24-year-old African-American man, in Minneapolis. The two shooters were Mark Ringgenberg and Dustin Schwarze. They were a part of the Minneapolis Police Department which subsequently placed the men on paid administrative leave. The night after Ringgenberg and Schwarze shot him, Clark died at the Hennepin County Medical Center after being taken off life support. His death resulted from one of the gunshot wounds the shooters inflicted on November 15.
On July 15, 2017, Justine Damond, a 40-year-old Australian-American woman, was fatally shot by 31-year-old Somali-American Minneapolis Police Department officer Mohamed Noor after she had called 9-1-1 to report the possible assault of a woman in an alley behind her house. Occurring weeks after a high-profile manslaughter trial acquittal in the 2016 police killing of Philando Castile, also in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area, the shooting exacerbated existing tensions and attracted national and international press.
On May 25, 2020, George Floyd, a 46-year-old black American man, was murdered in Minneapolis by Derek Chauvin, a 44-year-old white police officer. Floyd had been arrested after a store clerk reported that he made a purchase using a counterfeit $20 bill. Chauvin knelt on Floyd's neck for over nine minutes while Floyd was handcuffed and lying face-down in a street. Two other police officers, J. Alexander Kueng and Thomas Lane, assisted Chauvin in restraining Floyd. Lane had also pointed a gun at Floyd's head before Floyd was handcuffed. A fourth police officer, Tou Thao, prevented bystanders from intervening.
The following is a timeline of race relations and policing in Minneapolis–Saint Paul, providing details with a history of policing in the Twin Cities in the U.S. state of Minnesota from the nineteenth century to the present day. The Hennepin County Sheriff's Office, with its headquarters in downtown Minneapolis, is one of the "largest law enforcement agencies in Minnesota" with division and unit facilities throughout Hennepin County. Twin cities, Saint Paul and Minneapolis, have their own police departments, the Minneapolis Police Department, which was established in 1867 and the Saint Paul Police Department. A union for rank and file officers in Minneapolis—the Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis —was established in 1917.
Local protests over the murder of George Floyd, sometimes called the Minneapolis riots or the Minneapolis uprising, began on May 26, 2020, and within a few days had inspired a global protest movement against police brutality and racial inequality. The initial events were a reaction to a video filmed the day before and circulated widely in the media of police officer Derek Chauvin kneeling on Floyd's neck for several minutes while Floyd struggled to breathe, begged for help, lost consciousness, and died. Public outrage over the content of the video gave way to widespread civil disorder in Minneapolis, Saint Paul, and other cities in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area over the five-day period of May 26 to 30 after Floyd's murder.
A wave of civil unrest in the United States, initially triggered by the murder of George Floyd during his arrest by Minneapolis police officers on May 25, 2020, led to protests and riots against systemic racism in the United States, including police brutality and other forms of violence. Since the initial national wave and peak ended towards the end of 2020, numerous other incidents of police violence have drawn continued attention and lower intensity unrest in various parts of the country.
False rumors of a police shooting resulted in rioting, arson, and looting in the U.S. city of Minneapolis from August 26–28, 2020. The events began as a reaction to the suicide of Eddie Sole Jr., a 38-year old black man who was being pursued by Minneapolis police officers for his alleged involvement in a homicide. At approximately 2 p.m. on August 26, Sole died after he shot himself in the head as officers approached to arrest him. False rumors quickly spread on social media that Minneapolis police officers had fatally shot Sole. To quell unrest, Minneapolis police released closed-circuit television surveillance footage that captured Sole's suicide, which was later confirmed by a Hennepin County Medical Examiner's autopsy report.
As a reaction to the murder of George Floyd on May 25, 2020, racial justice activists and some residents of the Powderhorn community in Minneapolis staged an occupation protest at the intersection of East 38th Street and Chicago Avenue with a blockade of the streetway lasting over a year. The intersection is where Derek Chauvin, a white police officer with the Minneapolis Police Department, murdered George Floyd, an unarmed 46-year-old Black man. Activists erected barricades to block vehicular traffic and transformed the intersection and surrounding structures with amenities, social services, and public art depicting Floyd and other racial justice themes. The community called the unofficial memorial and protest zone at the intersection "George Floyd Square". The controversial street occupation in 2020 and 2021 was described as an "autonomous zone" and a "no-go" place for police, but local officials disputed the extent of such characterizations.
Dolal Idd was a 23-year-old Somali-American man who was killed in an exchange of gunfire with Minneapolis police officers at approximately 6:15 p.m. CST on December 30, 2020, after he shot at them from inside the car he was driving. The fatal encounter happened in the U.S. state of Minnesota during a police sting operation.
On April 11, 2021, Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old black American man, was fatally shot in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, by police officer Kimberly Potter during a traffic stop and attempted arrest for an outstanding warrant. After a brief struggle with officers, Potter shot Wright in the chest once at close range. Wright then drove off a short distance until his vehicle collided with another and hit a concrete barrier. An officer administered CPR to Wright; paramedics were unable to revive him, and he was pronounced dead at the scene. Potter said she meant to use her service Taser, shouting "Taser! Taser! Taser!" just before firing her service pistol instead.
Protests and civil disorder occurred in reaction to the killing of Daunte Wright on April 11, 2021. Wright, a 20-year-old Black man, was fatally shot by police officer Kimberly Potter during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, United States. Protests that first began in Brooklyn Center spread to other locations in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area and then to other cities in the United States. Several nights of civil disorder in Brooklyn Center and adjacent cities resulted in sporadic looting and damage to a few hundred properties, including four businesses that were set on fire.
Law enforcement authorities fatally shot Winston Boogie Smith Jr., a 32-year-old black American man, in the Uptown area of Minneapolis at 2:08 p.m. CDT on June 3, 2021. Smith was being pursued by a U.S. Marshals Service task force that apprehends wanted fugitives. The arrest operation had the participation of undercover agents from several local police agencies in Minnesota. The officers did not use body cameras or dashcams when apprehending Smith. Controversy over the lack of law enforcement footage of the arrest operation led to local police agencies ceasing aid to the Marshals Service's fugitive task force, and to changes to body and dash camera policies by the Marshals and other federal law enforcement agencies.
Civil unrest began in the Uptown district of the U.S. city of Minneapolis on June 3, 2021, as a reaction to news reports that law enforcement officers had killed a wanted suspect during an arrest. The law enforcement killing occurred atop a parking ramp near West Lake Street and Girard Avenue. Police fired several rounds, killing the person at the scene. In an initial statement about the encounter, the U.S. Marshals Service alleged that a person failed to comply with arresting officers and produced a gun. Crowds gathered on West Lake Street near the parking ramp soon afterwards as few details were known about the incident or the deceased person, who was later identified as Winston Boogie Smith, a 32-year-old black American man.
In 2020 and 2021, several protests were held in the U.S. city of Minneapolis that coincided with judicial proceedings and the criminal trial of Derek Chauvin. As an officer with the Minneapolis Police Department, Chauvin was charged with the murder of George Floyd, an unarmed African American man who died during an arrest incident on May 25, 2020. A bystander's video captured Chauvin kneeling on Floyd's neck for over nine minutes while Floyd struggled to breathe, lost consciousness, and died. Protesters opposed Chauvin's pre-trial release from jail on bail in October 2020. In the lead up to and during the criminal trial in early 2021, demonstrators sought conviction and maximum sentencing for Chauvin, and the enactment of police reform measures.
Amir Locke, a 22-year-old Black American man, was fatally shot on February 2, 2022, by SWAT officer Mark Hanneman of the Minneapolis Police Department inside an apartment in Minneapolis, Minnesota, where police were executing a no-knock search warrant in a homicide investigation. The officer-involved shooting was reviewed by the office of Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, the office of Hennepin County attorney Michael Freeman, and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. Ellison and Freeman declined to file criminal charges against the officer who shot Locke in a report released on April 6, 2022.
In the early 2020s, the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area in U.S. state of Minnesota experienced a wave of civil unrest, comprising peaceful demonstrations and riots, against systemic racism toward black Americans, notably in the form of police violence. A number of events occurred, beginning soon after the murder of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, by a white Minneapolis police officer on May 25, 2020. National Public Radio characterized the events as cultural reckoning on topics of racial injustice.