Terrence Sterling,Watch Gun Hill Online 31, was riding a motorcycle during the last minutes of his life.
Sterling was shot and killed by a Washington, D.C. police officer on Sept. 11, and the police body camera footage from the man's final moments was released by D.C. officials on Tuesday.
SEE ALSO: 'I felt like it was my family': The stories behind the protestersOfficer Brian Trainer shot Sterling, but didn't turn on his body camera until after the fact.
Warning: This video contains graphic footage some viewers may find disturbing.
In the video, officers pump Sterling's chest as the man's blood runs down the sidewalk and a woman screams in the background.
Police say officers were looking out for a "reckless" motorcyclist at around 4 a.m. when they came across Sterling. Sterling allegedly drove into the passenger side door after Trainer, 27, had stepped out of the police car. Then, Trainer shot him.
Police said Sterling sped into the passenger door on purpose, while witnesses said he could have done nothing to avoid the crash.
In the days after the shooting, officers in the city were told to confirm that their body cameras were on before they started interacting with citizens. 911 dispatchers have also been advised to remind officers to do so.
Trainer and his partner officer were both put on administrative leave.
Protesters demanding answers about how and why Sterling was killed demonstrated at around 4:30 a.m. on Monday, cutting off traffic for morning commuters driving into the capital city.
During the demonstration, the group chanted "We have questions. We need answers."
Though city officials released Trainer's body camera footage, it didn't do much to answer many questions about the case.
Previous:News From Nowhere Episode 11
Next:Laboring Academia
Volkswagen's ID.7 is a lightDark Sky is done. Here's how Apple's Weather app succeeded itMan finds tiny frogs hiding in wind chimes from Hurricane Dorian'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for January 3'Doctor Who' trailer: David Tennant and Catherine Tate are definitely backCES 2023: 3D print your collagen with NeutrogenaMegan Thee Stallion brings #hotgirlsummer to her fall semesterCES 2023: 3D print your collagen with NeutrogenaAre you about to not be stressed out? Check your Apple Watch.'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for January 4Tom Brady simply can't pull off this hatThe best true crime TikTok accounts of 2022America is built on cheating — and the fight against itNetflix's '1899' cancelled after just one season'Quordle' today: See each 'Quordle' answer and hints for December 29Apple might launch slightly larger iPad Pro models in 2024How to watch Netflix's 'Kaleidoscope' episodes in chronological orderShady meme says 'stop talking sh*t' and proceeds to talk sh*t11 social media hacks that will improve your timelines infinitelyOxford English Dictionary added 18 new LGBTQ terms in 2022 Return Engagement: An Interview with Rebecca Gates by Peter Terzian Watch: Issue 201 in Action! by Noah Wunsch Home to Darkness: An Interview with Playwright Tom Murphy by Belinda McKeon Maji Moto by Courtney Fitzpatrick Transatlantic by Maggie Shipstead See You There: Paris Review at the Strand, Tomorrow! by Sadie Stein On Parade by Jenny Hendrix Harvard and Class by Misha Glouberman Today's Hurdle hints and answers for June 5, 2025 Books, Crime, and Punishment! by The Paris Review TPR vs. High Times: Smoke ’Em If You Got ’Em by Cody Wiewandt See You There: Paris Review at the Strand by Sadie Stein Sylvia Plath's Sketches by Sadie Stein D. H. Lawrence’s “Pomegranate” by Eli Mandel On Uncle Vanya: Part Two by Clancy Martin Sheila Heti on How Should a Person Be? by Thessaly La Force Letter from India: The Best Restaurant in the World by Amie Barrodale Dance to the Music of Time: Tacita Dean at the New Museum by Joanne McNeil Faulkner, Munro, and Bribery! by Sadie Stein You’re at a Justin Bieber Concert by Evan James
1.9872s , 10106.84375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Gun Hill Online】,Co-creation Information Network