Current:Home > NewsA Pennsylvania coroner wants an officer charged in a driver’s shooting death. A prosecutor disagrees -AssetPath
A Pennsylvania coroner wants an officer charged in a driver’s shooting death. A prosecutor disagrees
View
Date:2025-04-24 04:58:20
A western Pennsylvania coroner wants a police officer who shot and killed a man after a car chase to be charged in his death, a recommendation that has generated strong backlash from the local prosecutor who maintains the shooting was justified.
Washington County Coroner Timothy Warco announced Thursday, after an inquest this week into the April 2 fatal shooting of Eduardo Hoover Jr., that Mount Pleasant Township Police Officer Tyler Evans should be charged with involuntary manslaughter.
Warco said if the county’s district attorney, Jason Walsh, does not pursue charges, state prosecutors should. But officials said Friday that under Pennsylvania’s Commonwealth Attorney’s Act, county coroners generally cannot refer criminal investigations to the attorney general’s office.
Evans did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment. Walsh, who announced in May that Evans’ shooting of Hoover was justified, dismissed Warco’s stance as “theatrical nonsense” during a news conference Friday.
“The standard for deadly force is a subjective one from the officer’s belief in real-time — firing his weapon not from the comfort and safety of a conference room,” Walsh said. “Officers have families they want to go home to.”
Hoover, 38, was killed following a police chase that began in Mount Pleasant Township and eventually involved the township’s police officers, as well as police from nearby Smith Township. Hoover eventually stopped and his car was boxed in by five police vehicles. Evans shot through the back window, striking Hoover twice.
Hoover’s family members who attended the inquest told reporters the coroner’s findings moved things a step closer to justice.
“I felt it was just unjustified the way he was killed,” Lori Cook, Hoover’s aunt, told KDKA-TV in Pittsburgh. “It’s just unreal that 38 years old and he’s gone. Three kids living without their dad is unreal.”
A county court agreed with the request of officers involved in the chase that they did not have to testify as part of the coroner’s inquest.
Warco made his recommendation based on his autopsy of Hoover, complaint and incident reports from the police departments and state police, the 911 call log, body cam footage and nearby surveillance footage.
In his report, Warco said that parts of Evans’ story did not align with the body camera images. Because Hoover’s car was trapped by police cars, he said, it could not be used as a deadly weapon and was not a threat to the officers.
Another officer stood in front of Hoover’s vehicle — “in greater danger than Officer Evans,” Warco said in his report — and shot at the car’s grille to disable it, rather than at Hoover.
Warco also argued that Evans risked the life of the other officer by shooting from the car’s rear toward the front.
Mount Pleasant Township Police Chief Matthew Tharp said in a phone interview Friday that the criminal investigation had cleared Evans and he remains an officer in good standing.
“I and Mount Pleasant support our police officer,” Tharp said. “We have cooperated from the beginning, as has Officer Evans.”
___
Schultz and Associated Press writer Mark Scolforo reported from Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, Shipkowski from Toms River, New Jersey.
veryGood! (5732)
Related
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- California is forging ahead with food waste recycling. But is it too much, too fast?
- Lionel Messi, Inter Miami tickets: Here are the Top 10 highest-selling MLS games in 2024
- Albuquerque Police Department Chief crashes into vehicle while avoiding gunfire
- North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
- Bears great Steve McMichael contracts another infection, undergoes blood transfusion, family says
- 'Like NBA Jam': LED court makes debut to mixed reviews at NBA All-Star weekend's celebrity game
- Feds charge Minnesota man who they say trained with ISIS and threatened violence against New York
- Meta releases AI model to enhance Metaverse experience
- George Santos sues late-night host Jimmy Kimmel for tricking him into making videos to ridicule him
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- State governments looking to protect health-related data as it’s used in abortion battle
- Driver of stolen tow truck smashes police cruisers during Maryland chase
- Don’t Miss Kate Spade Outlet’s Presidents’ Day Sale Featuring Bags Up to 90% Off, Just in Time for Spring
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- See Ashley Park Return to Emily in Paris Set With Lily Collins After Hospitalization
- 'We can’t do anything': How Catholic hospitals constrain medical care in America.
- 4.7 magnitude earthquake outside of small Texas city among several recently in area
Recommendation
Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
13 men, including an American, arrested at Canada hotel and charged with luring minors for sexual abuse
Why Ukraine needs U.S. funding, and why NATO says that funding is an investment in U.S. security
GOP candidates elevate anti-transgender messaging as a rallying call to Christian conservatives
Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
Ouch: College baseball player plunked seven times(!) in doubleheader
5-year-old migrant boy who got sick at a temporary Chicago shelter died from sepsis, autopsy shows
Tiger Woods Withdraws From Genesis Invitational Golf Tournament Over Illness