Stephon Clark's family to continue 'pursuit of justice' for man killed by police

Angry relatives of a black man fatally shot by police as he held a cellphone have promised to continue their "fight for justice" after prosecutors in California declined to bring charges against the officers.

"This is just the beginning. The fight for justice has just begun," Stephon Clark's mother, SeQuette Clark, said immediately after prosecutors announced their decision on Saturday.

The family planned a news conference at a Sacramento church Sunday with the Rev. Al Sharpton's group National Action Network to discuss what steps they might take.

They have already filed a $20 million wrongful death lawsuit.

There have been numerous protests since Clark, 22, was killed March 18, 2018, in his grandparents' yard. After Saturday's announcement a Black Lives Matter demonstration drew about 100 people to Sacramento police headquarters where they protested peacefully in chilly rain.

Officers Terrance Mercadal and Jared Robinet, who were chasing a vandalism suspect, said they believed Clark was holding a gun when they confronted him.

In announcing that the officers would not be charged, Sacramento County District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert said evidence, including body-camera video, showed they indeed believed he had a gun.

She also said physical evidence revealed Clark was the man who broke three vehicle windows and an elderly man's sliding glass patio door shortly before the officers confronted him.

Family members accused her of unfairly blaming Clark for his death by revealing that and the personal troubles he'd been going through in the days before he was killed.

The mother of Clark's children had recently brought a domestic violence complaint against him that Schubert said could have sent him to jail. She also revealed that Clark had been researching suicide websites, including those that suggested using a tranquilizer that was found in his body.

"Whatever his character is or his actions prior to those officers gunning him down, is no one's business," Clark's mother said. "It's not justification. That's not a permit to kill him."

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