Attorney Claims Kenosha Police Officer Who Shot Jacob Blake Was Trying to Prevent a Kidnapping

An attorney for the Kenosha, Wisc., police officer who shot Jacob Blake seven times in the back on Aug. 23 is now claiming that his client shot Blake because he believed the 29-year-old was attempting a kidnapping at the time of the confrontation that led to weeks of protests against police violence. Suggested Reading Spades?…

An attorney for the Kenosha, Wisc., police officer who shot Jacob Blake seven times in the back on Aug. 23 is now claiming that his client shot Blake because he believed the 29-year-old was attempting a kidnapping at the time of the confrontation that led to weeks of protests against police violence.

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In a recent interview with CNN, attorney Brendan Matthews said Officer Rusten Sheskey made the decision to shoot Blake, not just because of the knife police officers have claimed Blake was wielding, but because Sheskey feared Blake was going to flee the scene with a child he had just placed in his back seat.

Itโ€™s been reported that there were three children sitting in Blakeโ€™s car at the time of the shooting. However, Matthews said in the interview that as Sheskey arrived at the scene, he saw Blake place one child in the back seat of his car but was unaware that the other two children were also seated there.

From CNN:

โ€œHeโ€™s got my kid. Heโ€™s got my keys,โ€ Sheskey heard a woman say, according to attorney Brendan Matthews, who is representing the officer. If Sheskey had allowed Blake to drive away and something happened to the child โ€œthe question would have been โ€˜why didnโ€™t you do something?โ€™โ€ Matthews said.

The attorneyโ€™s comments to CNN come as authorities in Wisconsin announced this week that the results of an investigation by the state Department of Justice would soon be turned over to a retired police chief serving as an independent consultant for his review. The consultant is in turn expected to forward the case to local prosecutors along with an analysis intended to help determine whether criminal charges against Sheskey are warranted. The officer remains on paid administrative leave.

Blake has not been charged with any crimes related to the confrontationโ€”despite the fact that at one point he was handcuffed to his hospital bed as he recovered from his wounds, which reportedly left him paralyzed from the waist downโ€”but Matthews insists that Blake was the aggressor that day, not the police officers.

Matthews told CNN that the current narrative surrounding the shooting is โ€œincomplete, inaccurate.โ€ What he really means is that the involved police officersโ€™ accounts of what took place differ from that of Blakeโ€™s family members, attorneys and some witnesses.

For example, Matthews repeated claims made by Sheskey that Blake had a knife in his hand and โ€œtwisted his body towards the officerโ€ before he was shot. In the video footage that circulated on social media in the wake of the shooting, there is no visible weapon in Blakeโ€™s hand, but Matthews said a second officer on the scene, who he also represents, said he also saw the knife. According to Matthew, that officer claimed he also would have shot Blake but he didnโ€™t have a clear angle despite his vantage point being clear enough to corroborate Sheskeyโ€™s story.

Blakeโ€™s attorneys and family members have repeatedly asserted that Blake was unarmed at the time he was shot and denied allegations that he fought with officers prior to shots being fired. According to CNN, investigators have reported that a knife was found on the floorboard of Blakeโ€™s car but have not released any reports saying Blake held the knife at any point during the confrontation.

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