Date | January 20, 2018 |
---|---|
Location | Overland Park, Kansas, U.S. |
Type | police killing by shooting |
Participants | Overland Park Police officer Clayton Jenison |
Deaths | John Albers |
Inquiries | Federal Bureau of Investigation |
Litigation | Albers v. Overland Park, Kansas [1] |
On January 20, 2018, John Albers, a 17-year old white male, was shot and killed by an Overland Park Police officer responding to a report of a suicidal male. [2] [3] In 2021, faith leaders with MORE2 held a press conference and published an "open letter" calling for the termination of Overland Park Police Chief Frank Donchez after the arrests of nonviolent demonstrators protesting the George Floyd killing at the urging of white nationalists in July, 2020. [4] And Donchez resigned with no official reason given on September 12, 2023.
On January 20, 2018, a friend of John Albers reportedly called 911 saying that Albers had "been taking pills and drinking. ... [He] was done with life and threatened to hurt himself." Two Overland Park Police Officers responded to the Albers home. John's parents were out for the evening. The officers reportedly discussed the situation for a few moments without taking any action. Then the garage door opened, and a minivan started backing out. One of the officers reportedly yelled, "Stop, stop, stop". When the vehicle didn't stop immediately, Officer Clayton Jenison, shot Albers multiple times, killing him. [5]
His parents subsequently sued Officer Jenison and the City of Overland Park. [5] They subsequently received a $2.3 million settlement from the city. [6]
The officer who killed Albers was given a $70,000 severance package to resign in March 2018 after having been cleared of wrongdoing by Johnson County District Attorney Steve Howe and Overland Park Police Chief Frank Donchez. [7] [8]
On September 22, 2020, the FBI opened a federal civil rights investigation of the incident [9] [10] but closed it almost two years later with no action. [11]
On April 26, 2021, several faith leaders with the Metropolitan Organization for Racial and Economic Equality (stylized "MORE2", pronounced "MORE-squared") joined Sheila Albers in a press conference calling for the termination of Chief Frank Donchez. They expressed an overall “lack of confidence in the leadership of our police”. Ms. Albers said that she and her husband had "listened to city leadership engage in telling lies or omitting information" for 3+1⁄2 years. The MORE2 open letter stated that "when threats from white nationalists emerged [in July 2020], Donchez chose to crack down on protestors rather than to stand up to extremists. We cannot accept bending to the demands of white nationalists.” It was also reported that white nationalists had complained to the police about nonviolent protestors they called "terrorists", after which the Overland Park police arrested three black men and one white woman at a subsequent nonviolent protest, charging one of the black men with a felony. City Councilman Chris Newlin added, “The Chief mentioned that Proud Boys were going to show up. It was unfortunate that protestors were arrested.” At the time of this MORE2 press conference, one of those white nationalists was reportedly "in custody for his role in the [January 6, 2021,] attack on our own Capitol". [4]
On September 12, 2023, Donchez resigned with no official reason given, [12] though the City shared an email from Sheila Albers, John's mother, complaining that Chief Donchez approached her during a City Council meeting the evening before asking to dialog with her. She said Donchez had told a reporter a full year after the incident that Officer Jenison had left the force "within a week or two" after the incident. She later learned that Officer Jenison had received a $70,000 severance package in March 2018, though Chief Donchez had told a reporter that Jenison had left "within a week or two" after the incident, not over a month later. Donchez then reportedly told Ms. Albers that "John struggled with his mental health ... . And you left him at his hour of need." [13] [14] A subsequent report said that Overland Park City Manager Lori Curtis Luther had "begun the termination" process, but Chief Donchez resigned before she could complete it. Chief Donchez' tenure had been marred by other issues including an “overly reactive and militarized response” to a Black Lives Matter protest, a lawsuit over age and sex discrimination, and criminal allegations involving a police nonprofit where three officers served as directors. [15]
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