San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department admits it killed teen hostage. Why did it take so long?

San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department admits it killed teen hostage. Why did it take so long?
The California Highway Patrol has issued an Amber Alert alerting for Anthony Graziano, right, who is suspected of shooting his wife to death and abducting his 15-year-old daughter, Savannah Graziano.
(Fonta Police Dept.)

San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department admits it killed teen hostage. Why did it take so long?

Fast Break

Nathan Solis April 4, 2024

For the first time in nearly two years, the public heard the voice of a San Bernardino County

s

heriff’s deputy plead with his fellow officers to stop shooting at a 15-year-old girl on the side of a California highway in broad daylight.

The audio was released more than 500 days after a sheriff’s deputy fatally shot Savannah Graziano. The teen had been abducted the day before by her father, Anthony Graziano, who shot and killed Tracy Martinez Savannah’s mother and his estranged wife in Fontana during a domestic dispute near Cypress Elementary School.

Both Anthony and Savannah Graziano were killed on Sept. 27, 2022, and officials have provided little information about their deaths.

Video and audio released Friday to independent journalist Joey Scott show the events leading up to a violent shootout on

Highway

the 15

Freeway

and verify that the teen was shot and killed by a sheriff’s deputy. They also show that San Bernardino County Sheriff Shannon Dicus mischaracterized important aspects of the case in his public comments in the aftermath of Savannah’s shooting mischaracterizations that the department never sought to correct.

The Sheriff’s Department declined any follow-up questions about the release of information in the Graziano case, which is under investigation by the California Department of Justice.

“My hope is that this video will be watched in its entirety and provide insight into the unfortunate events that unfolded that day,” Dicus said in reference to the incident video released by his department Friday. “There has been speculation and misrepresentations about this case, and I would ask the public to allow the DOJ to complete its independent investigation before reaching a conclusion.”

Newly released video footage shows San Bernardino deputies fatally shoot abducted teen

The day after the shooting, Dicus said

that

Savannah

ran had run

toward deputies before she was shot, implying that she may have posed a threat. But Savannah’s last steps were cautious, according to helicopter footage in a 15-minute incident video narrated by the

S

heriff’s

D

epartment. Savannah seemed to crouch near the ground after getting out of her father’s white truck. The nameless deputy heard in the audio shouts to her amid the sound of gunshots just before she

was is

shot by another deputy.

Dicus also said after the incident that sheriffs investigators determined Shannon was a participant in shooting at our deputies during the high-speed pursuit that preceded her death. In the video, however, the department walked back that claim, saying the question of whether Shannon fired at deputies was still being investigated.

In a statement on Friday, Dicus said he spoke to the media after the shooting “to maintain transparency throughout the process.”

Dicus asked the California Department of Justice to investigate the shooting under Assembly Bill 1506, which authorizes the state to review a shooting

where in which

an officer is involved to determine whether their actions were justified.

Scott, whose reporting first appeared in the Guardian, requested information from San

Bernardino

County under the California Public Records Act in October 2022. For a year and a half, he repeatedly received the same response from the department: The information was part of an ongoing investigation, and he would be provided an update at a later time.

On Friday, when the county released several videos about the shooting an edited video summarizing the events that led up to the shooting and unedited video footage from a helicopter and surveillance videos those were accompanied by a statement saying the county hadn’t been able to provide all of the evidence sooner because of a ransomware attack in April 2023

, which that

also hindered its ability to provide information to the California Department of Justice.

Deputies kick down bathroom door, fatally shoot armed teen in midst of mental health crisis

“Despite extensive and ongoing efforts to resolve this issue, much of the data remained inaccessible,” the Sheriff’s Department said in a statement that accompanied the release of the documents

.

. All of the information

that

state investigators sought has since been made available to them.

Police transparency laws such as 2018’s Senate Bill 1421 and Assembly Bill 748 require the disclosure of records related to police shootings, certain uses of force and any information regarding the injury or death of a person by an officer. But there is often

pushback resistance from by

law enforcement agencies to

shield release that the

information.

“The public has a right to the full story, not just the official story,” said David Loy, legal director with the nonprofit First Amendment Coalition

.

The organization provided legal advice to Scott and threatened to file a lawsuit as he sought records from the Sheriff’s Department. While there have been many questions swirling around the Graziano case, the one aspect that’s clear is that sheriff’s deputies were involved in a shooting and that warrants the disclosure of information, Loy said.

There are legal reasons for withholding documents, Loy said, such as

the

potential harm to a confidential source. But the law does not allow a police agency to withhold records simply by saying there is an investigation.

“Once the shooting had occurred, tragic as it was, there were no further witnesses to be interviewed, there were no confidential sources. It was an incident that happened in broad daylight on I-15,” he added.

Devastating bodycam video shows the moment deputies opened fire on 15-year-old with autism

Police agencies should allow members of the public to make up their minds rather than withhold vital information, Loy said.

“I’m not here to take a position on whether this is a legally justified shooting. But law enforcement officers work for the people, not the other way around,” he said. “They are public servants. We pay their salaries just like garbage workers or planners or clerks. And so the public has a right to, in effect, audit their performance.”

The Department of Justice declined to comment on the investigation, referring a Times reporter to a September 2022 news release about the investigation.

The San Bernardino County Board of Supervisors is being kept updated by the

S

heriff’s

D

epartment on all external investigations into the county, according to David Wert, a county spokesperson.

“Based on the information provided, it appears that the

s

heriff is managing these situations appropriately,” Wert said.

The

S

heriff’s

D

epartment has not released the names of the deputies involved in the shooting.

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