Minneapolis police sniper fatally shoots man in 6 hour standoff

1 year ago
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Minneapolis police release body camera footage from Sundberg shooting
The footage shows police rescue a mother and her young children, but it doesn't clearly show the final moments before police snipers fired. Minneapolis police released body cam footage of moments at the beginning and end of a six-hour standoff with Andrew 'Tekle' Sundberg which ended in Sundberg's death. ity officials released four separate videos of the incident totaling 15 minutes, showing the beginning and end of the overnight standoff outside an apartment building in south Minneapolis. The footage confirms much of what police said police arriving at Sundberg's apartment building at around 11:30 p.m., shortly after neighbor Arabella Foss-Yarbrough called 911 to report bullets had entered her apartment through her kitchen wall.

An officer announced himself while banging on a metal door. Shots are fired, and the slugs mushroom into the door from the other side.

"Shots fired. Shots fired in the north stairwell," an officer shouts. "I'm not hit, but they're shooting through the door. Three [expletive] bullets."

Officers briefly retreat, then Foss-Yarbrough emerges from the door frantically, and the officers usher her out with guns drawn. When the door is open, they see where three bullet holes in the door.

"Hands!" the officers shout. "Show me your [expletive] hands!"

Minneapolis police released body cam footage of moments at the beginning and end of a six-hour standoff with Andrew Tekle Sundberg which ended in Sundberg's death.
Video (14:12): Minneapolis police release body camera footage from Sundberg shooting
"My kids are right there!" she replies. Two toddlers emerge from an apartment, one wearing a diaper, and the officers help them down the stairwell.

"Mommy's here," Foss-Yarbrough tells them.

Another video, taken after 4 a.m., shows police attempting to convince Sundberg to exit the building, as Sundberg leans out the window and speaks incomprehensibly.

"We don't want to hurt you," an officer shouts up to him. "We just want to go home. We want to make sure you get the help you need. C'mon out."

Two other videos shows the point of view of SWAT snipers. The sound of glass breaking can be heard off camera. "He's threatening to shoot the officers and he's breaking out apartment windows," says a voice over the radio.

One of the snipers describes Sundberg holding a cell phone, and then "waving something around in there."

"Gun," both snipers announce. Then they shoot twice.

Police rushed in and began to render medical aid about a minute later, according to an incident report. Sundberg died later at HCMC.

"This is not an outcome that anyone wanted," said Mayor Jacob Frey in a news conference Wednesday. "My deepest condolences go out out the family of Mr. Sundberg."

The 15 minutes of video represents only a fraction of the total body-camera footage from dozens of officers on the scene for six hours. But it marks the first objective view of critical moments of the standoff released to public so far. As agents from the Bureau of Criminal Activity investigate the incident — standard protocol for all police shootings — the body-camera footage and other records are classified as private data under Minnesota law.

Frey said the city decided to release the video segment voluntarily and without narration "to be transparent, pure and simple." He said her and other city officials wouldn't comment on specifics on the video as the investigation continues.

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