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This Article is From Oct 17, 2015

Family Sues After US Teen Shot Dead During Traffic Stop

Family Sues After US Teen Shot Dead During Traffic Stop
Representational Image.
Washington, United States: The parents of a US teenager are suing after their son was shot dead during a police traffic stop, media reports said, as video of the deadly encounter emerged.

The case comes amid a national debate on the use of force by police in the United States, with white officers often accused of racism. In this case, however, both the officer and the teenager were white.

Bodycam footage of the February incident in Michigan shows 17-year-old Deven Guilford repeatedly questioning and defying demands by Eaton County Sheriff's Sergeant Jonathan Frost to hand over his license, registration and proof of insurance.

Frost, who reportedly pulled Guilford over for flashing him with his high beams, then orders the teenager who was en route to see his girlfriend on a Saturday evening out of the car and the situation quickly escalates.

"Down on the ground, now!" yells the officer who then kicks Guilford's cell phone away before tasing him and subsequently shooting him seven times in a confrontation that was not caught on camera in its entirety.

"I don't have a weapon," Guilford is heard saying on the footage posted on the website of NBC News .

Guilford's parents filed a federal lawsuit this week against both Frost and Michigan's Eaton County, four months after prosecutors decided not to charge the officer, reports said Friday.

Frost has said Guilford attacked him before he shot the teenager, according to NBC. And bodycam footage of Frost purportedly taken after the incident aired by CNN shows his face bloodied.

The wrongful death and violation of civil rights lawsuit, published by the Detroit Free Press, claims that Frost had no legal cause to stop Guilford and that Frost "unreasonably treated Guilford as if he were a dangerous felon."

The lawsuit also says that Frost's car had "improperly bright or misaimed, headlights" and that at least three vehicles, including Guilford's, flashed their headlights at him in an apparent attempt to get him to dim them because they "projected glaring oncoming rays into the eyes of oncoming drivers."

It also says Guilford was driving his girlfriend's car at the time of the incident the evening of February 28 and was on his way to see her after playing basketball at this church with his brother.
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