Jury Awards $17M in Damages for Costco Shooting by Then-LAPD Officer

LOS ANGELES (CNS) - A federal jury in Riverside today ordered the city of Los Angeles and a former police officer to pay $17 million in damages to the family of a mentally disabled man who was fatally shot by the officer during an altercation inside a Costco store in Corona, according to a published report.

The bulk of the verdict will be borne by the city, with the eight-person jury finding that Salvador Sanchez, then an off-duty Los Angeles Police Department officer, was acting within the scope of his employment when he opened fire inside the store on June 14, 2019, the Los Angeles Times reported.

According to The Times, the jury awarded the damages to Russell and Paola French, the parents of 32-year-old Kenneth French, who was killed in the shooting.

Authorities said Kenneth French and Sanchez were waiting at a sausage sample table inside the Corona Costco store when French, without provocation, punched or shoved Sanchez from behind, causing him to fall on the floor.

Sanchez's attorney said the then-officer was holding his year-old son in his arms when he was attacked, and claimed Sanchez briefly lost consciousness. When he came to, he opened fire, contending that French was still hovering over him.

French was fatally shot, and his parents were both wounded. Corona police said earlier that Kenneth French was shot once in the shoulder and three times in the back, while Paola French was shot in the back and her husband was shot in the abdomen, resulting in the loss of a kidney.

The French family says they pleaded with Sanchez not to shoot, telling the officer that their son, who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia and was largely non-verbal, had mental health issues. They also claim they were backing away from Sanchez when the shooting occurred.

Following Wednesday's verdict, the French family attorney, Dale K. Galipo, told The Times, “They're hoping now that they've received some justiceon behalf of Kenneth, they can start the healing and closure process.”

Rob Wilcox, a spokesman for the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office, told the paper, “We will review all our options including appeal.”

Sanchez was fired by the department last year after the city Police Commission determined that he acted outside department policy in the shooting.

He is awaiting trial on charges of voluntary manslaughter and assault with a semiautomatic firearm.

Riverside County prosecutors had declined to file any charges in the case, but the state Attorney General's Office opted to pursue a case following a review of the shooting.


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