Prosecutor
says police were justified in killing Bosnian Muslim on rampage
February 19, 2007 8:13 PM
SALT LAKE CITY-Police officers acted properly in gunning down a Bosnian
teenager who shot five people to death in a mall crowded with shoppers,
a prosecutor said.
"They were legally justified in using deadly force," District Attorney
Lohra Miller said Friday of the four Salt Lake City officers.
The first officer to confront the 18-year-old gunman was Ken Hammond,
who was off-duty and out of uniform when he heard gunshots at the shopping
center. He traded fire with Sulejman Talovic and was credited with keeping
the assailant occupied until other officers arrived.
Miller found no fault with Hammond's actions, but his role was being
reviewed separately by authorities in Ogden, north of Salt Lake City, where
he works.
Also Friday, lawmakers and the governor honored the five officers at
the state Capitol. Hammond was given a medal by his boss, Ogden Police
Chief Jon Greiner, who also is a state senator.
"I feel bad that I didn't react sooner and prevent more loss of lives,"
Hammond told lawmakers. "But I'm also very thankful I was there."
Investigators have not determined a motive for Monday's rampage.
Authorities released Talovic's body to a mortuary Friday. Relatives
said his parents planned to bury him in Bosnia.
Talovic moved to the Salt Lake City area with his family in 1998, joining
several thousand other immigrants from the Balkans, many of whom fled ethnic
violence in their homeland.