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  • Los Angeles Times

    'He didn't deserve to die': Family says man shot by Downey police was mentally ill, unarmed

    By Rebecca Ellis,

    3 hours ago

    A mentally ill man was fatally shot Saturday by Downey police in his backyard after a neighbor called the police on him for lighting fireworks, his family said.

    The Downey Police Department said it was responding to a call about a “disturbance” on Stewart and Gray Road about 6:15 p.m.

    The family said Alberto Nicholas Arenas, 29, had struggled with psychosis since he was 12 and lived with his parents at their home. On Saturday night, some of the family was barbecuing in the backyard where Arenas had been drinking, which often triggered psychotic episodes, his father, Alberto Hurtado Arenas, said.

    He said his son had been lighting fireworks in the backyard when he got in an argument with a neighbor, who said the explosives were upsetting his dog. One of the neighbors called the police, the family said.

    "He didn't deserve to die," said his sister, Samantha Arenas. "He wasn’t a bad person — he was trying to get his life together."

    His sister, who was not at the home at the time, said a SWAT team with a negotiator responded to the call, though she said she did not know why the call required the heightened response. She said her two younger siblings, who were home at the time, told her that police kept asking them if he had a weapon.

    "They kept telling him no," she said. "He doesn’t have anything — he’s just mentally unstable."

    Arenas' father said he'd been driving home from Azusa about an hour away when he learned the police were at the house.

    For roughly two hours, his father said, his son stood in the fenced-off backyard while law enforcement stood outside the house's six-foot wooden gate, yelling at Arenas to come out onto the street. He said the gate has a large plank missing, where the negotiator spoke through.

    The father said he called the Downey police station at least a half dozen times asking them to wait to engage with his son until he was home.

    "I had told them, 'Don't go in my yard, wait until I get there,' " the father recounted. "The officers were badgering him through the wall."

    At one point, he said, the dispatcher told him that his son had shot at the police, and the police had returned fire.

    He said no one else aside from the dispatcher has told him his son fired a weapon.

    The police statement said the man died at the scene and no officer was injured. The statement did not mention if any weapon was found at the scene.

    Downey police said the California Department of Justice is handling the investigation into the shooting. The Department of Justice typically investigates police shootings when the victim did not have a weapon.

    The state Department of Justice did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

    Arenas' father said the Downey police knew his son, who he said had a felony conviction, and was aware he struggled with mental illness. He said his son had been improving lately, recently landing a promising job with a company that makes medical supplies and taking care of his two children, a 9-month-old and a 2-year-old.

    The father said, in his opinion, there was "nothing to stop" officers from walking away from the home that night.

    "When you know the history of someone who has a mental illness, don't badger them," he said. "There’s nothing that's going to bring my son back."

    This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times .

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