The mother of a man fatally shot by St. Paul police last month called Thursday for police reform and justice in her son's death.
Kim Handy Jones spoke at a news conference outside the St. Paul City Hall and Ramsey County courthouse building in memory of her son, Cordale Q. Handy. She filed a federal lawsuit Wednesday against the city, its police department and the three officers who were present when her son was killed on March 15 in the Dayton's Bluff neighborhood.
"My son Cordale was a gift from God," she said. "My child did not deserve to die in that execution-style manner."
Handy, 29, was killed about 2:20 a.m. near the intersection of Sinnen and E. 7th streets after police were called to a domestic dispute at a nearby apartment.
Handy Jones' lawsuit alleges that St. Paul police observe a code of silence and encourage "excessive and unreasonable" force, and that the officers who responded to the scene colluded after the fact.
"In order to cover up their misconduct, they falsely claimed that Cordale Handy placed them in imminent fear of bodily harm," the lawsuit said of the officers' actions.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA) is investigating the shooting and has said that Handy pointed a gun at the officers twice and ignored orders to drop the weapon. Officers Mikko Norman and Nathaniel Younce — both with two years on the force — fired and hit Handy, the BCA said.
Andrew Stroth, a civil rights attorney from Chicago representing Handy Jones, a resident of Lake County, Ill., said at Thursday's news conference that the police use of force was "unjustified" and illegal. The suit references statistics kept by the Star Tribune that show that between November 2000 and this year, 11 of 24 people killed by police in St. Paul were black.