An unarmed man was shot by a Virginia deputy who gave him a ride home an hour earlier
An unarmed man was shot by a Virginia sheriff's deputy about an hour after the same deputy gave the man a ride home, Virginia State Police confirmed to CNN.
An attorney for Isiah Brown, 32, said his client was shot while on the phone with 911 after the deputy -- who had returned to respond to a "domestic incident," per state police -- mistook a phone for a gun.
Brown was taken to a local hospital after the shooting early Wednesday with serious but non-life-threatening injuries, according to statements from the Virginia State Police, which said its Bureau of Criminal Investigation's Culpeper Field Office Police Shooting Investigation Team was investigating at the request of the Spotsylvania County Sheriff's Office.
The shooting took place after a Spotsylvania County Sheriff's deputy responded to a call about a "disabled motorist" and gave Brown a ride home from a gas station, state police said.
Asked if the deputy who shot Brown was the same who had given him a ride home earlier, VSP spokesperson Corinne Geller confirmed to CNN it was the same deputy.
The body camera video and 911 audio were released late Friday, after the sheriff's office said Brown's family had reviewed both at the invitation of the sheriff's office and a special prosecutor in the case, the Fredericksburg Commonwealth's Attorney.
"After viewing the Spotsylvania County Sheriff's deputy's bodycam video and listening to the 911 call, it is evident that the tragic shooting of Isiah Brown was completely avoidable," David Haynes, an attorney for Brown's family, said in a statement. He said Brown was "on the phone with 911 at the time of the shooting and the officer mistook a cordless house phone for a gun."
In the body camera footage, the deputy is heard saying Brown has a gun.
"Drop the gun now and stop walking towards me," the deputy is heard yelling in the body camera footage. "Stop walking towards me. Stop. Stop."
A spokesperson for the Virginia State Police told CNN Brown was unarmed at the time of the shooting.
"The deputy in question made multiple, basic policing errors and violated established protocols," Haynes said. "The deputy was situated nearly 50 feet from Isiah, was never threatened and should not have discharged his weapon."
The shooting of Brown, who is Black, comes at a time when law enforcement agencies are under increased scrutiny following high-profile fatal shootings of Black people, including 16-year-old Ma'Khia Bryant in Columbus, Ohio, and Andrew Brown Jr. in Elizabeth City, North Carolina.
The deputy, who has not been named, has been placed on administrative leave according to the sheriff's office policy, Sheriff Roger Harris said in a video statement released alongside the body camera footage and 911 audio.
Shooting occurred after 'domestic incident'
The shooting occurred just before 3:20 a.m. local time Wednesday, about 50 minutes after a Spotsylvania County Sheriff's deputy had given Brown a ride home, according to statements from the Virginia State Police.
VSP said the deputy who shot Brown was responding to a "domestic incident" when the shooting occurred.
In the 911 audio, Brown is heard arguing with his brother, who Brown says won't let him go into their mother's room. Brown indicates he can't get to his car, but the dispatcher says the car had broken down.
At one point, Brown asks his brother for a gun, but his brother refuses. Brown tells the dispatcher he's about to kill his brother.
The dispatcher asks Brown whether he has a gun, to which he says both yes and no, according to the transcript of the call that accompanied the sheriff's office video. Moments later Brown tells the dispatcher he is outside, walking down the road, when sirens are heard in the background.
"You need to hold your hands up," the dispatcher tells Brown. "Hold your hands up ... Isiah, are you holding your hands up?"
The deputy's body camera was not pointed at Brown but shows a deputy arriving to find Brown in the roadway. The deputy gets out of the vehicle and repeatedly orders Brown to show his hands and to "drop the gun."
"He's got a gun to his head," the deputy says.
He tells Brown to "drop the gun" and to stop walking towards him.
That's when a series of gunshots ring out. The deputy continues telling Brown to drop the gun and show his hands before providing Brown with medical aid. In the footage released by the sheriff's office, Brown is blurred out.
Communication failure led to shooting, attorney says
A spokesperson for the family attorney told CNN Saturday morning they have learned through medical records that Brown was shot 10 times. VSP told CNN Friday night it was unclear how many times Brown was shot, saying state police were still waiting on official medical reports from the hospital.
Officials are asking anyone with additional information about the incident to contact the Virginia State Police Bureau of Criminal Investigation.
Once the investigation is complete, the case will be turned over to the special prosecutor, Fredericksburg Commonwealth's Attorney LaBravia Jenkins, VSP's statement said.
Haynes said Brown "clearly told dispatch that he did not have a weapon" before the deputy arrived.
Brown's family is also asking for the release of the dispatch audio with the deputy prior to the shooting, Haynes said, adding there was "obviously a failure of communication between dispatch and the officer which led to this tragic event."
"Isiah is now fighting for his life as a result of these completely avoidable errors by the deputy and dispatch," Haynes said.
Correction: An earlier version of this story misspelled Isiah Brown's first name.
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