Residents of a Milwaukee neighborhood about a mile from the Republican National Convention gather after a police shooting at King Park. Photo by Henry Redman | Wisconsin Examiner.
Five Columbus, Ohio police officers shot and killed a homeless man close to Milwaukee’s King Park on Tuesday. The shooting took place more than a mile from the security perimeter of the Republican National Convention, which has drawn more than 4,000 police officers from across the country to the city.
At a press conference nearby that did not begin until after 7 p.m., more than five hours after the shooting, Milwaukee Police Chief Jeffrey Norman said 13 Columbus Police officers were in the area when a fight broke out between two men. One of the men involved pulled two knives. Five of the officers fired, killing the man, identified as Sam Sharpe.
Norman said two knives were recovered at the scene, adding that “somebody’s life was in danger.”
Security camera video of the incident, obtained by the Wisconsin Examiner from the Milwaukee Alliance, a community organizing group, shows two men walking into the street appearing to be fighting when the police officers enter the frame and immediately shoot one of the men.
(Editor’s note: Warning, the following video includes graphic violence.)
A group of teenagers who were playing basketball at the park said the police started firing within 20 seconds of arriving at the scene. Body camera footage released Tuesday evening shows the officers in a circle discussing their work in the city when one of them notices the fight and that one of the men is holding a knife. Just 14 seconds later, the first shot is fired. (
Editor’s note: body camera footage has been edited to pause the video right after the first shot is fired, while the audio continues)
King Park is known to have a tent community of unhoused people, which has fluctuated in size over the years. On Monday evening, the Poor People’s Army led a march from King Park to the Republican National Convention grounds to raise awareness of the needs of unhoused people. Community members near the scene said Sharpe lived in the encampment in the park. Some local residents said the man was known to live in the park with his dog.
Residents of the neighborhood said they want to know why the Ohio officers were outside the RNC security zone. “I heard the chief say that he was going to protect not only the zone, but the city,” neighborhood resident Carl Gray told the Wisconsin Examiner. “We ain’t protected, that’s not protection when you have Ohio police that’s coming here and killing Milwaukee residents.”
Aurelia Ceja, a spokesperson for the Milwaukee Alliance, told the Wisconsin Examiner that the shooting was a “worst case scenario” of the RNC coming to Milwaukee after activists had warned city officials that inviting thousands of additional law enforcement officers to the community would be a threat. She added that Milwaukee Police Chief Jeffrey Norman said prior to the convention that cops from outside agencies would not be patrolling outside of the security footprint of the convention.
At the press conference, Norman said the officers were assigned to patrol the King Park neighborhood during the convention because it is an “area of concern.”
Milwaukee’s King Park surrounded by yellow tape after a police shooting. Henry Redman | Wisconsin Examiner
Brian Steel, president of the Columbus Police Union, said in a statement that the union had “been made aware that members of the Columbus Division of Police were involved in an officer-involved shooting at the Republican National Convention … No officers have been injured.”
Steel told the Examiner that Columbus sent 40 officers to Milwaukee for the RNC, adding that while he expected the two officers involved in the shooting to leave, the others would remain in the city to “complete their mission.”
Norman said the shooting is being investigated by the Milwaukee Area Investigative Team, with the Greenfield Police Department leading the review. The Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office will have jurisdiction of the decision over whether or not to charge the officers involved.
Wisconsin Examiner is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Wisconsin Examiner maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Ruth Conniff for questions: info@wisconsinexaminer.com. Follow Wisconsin Examiner on Facebook and X.
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