• Adults Only Website 18+

    If you are under 18 you are not permitted to submit personal information to us or use this website. If discovered you will be banned.

    We will ban and report anyone posting illegal content.

    We will ban any forum user who breaks our terms.

    Freedom of speech should be wide open as long as it doesn't incite violence.

    We have a 15 year old thriving community here with 400,000+ members and hundreds of people online at any given moment, we encourage you to join!, there are 1000's of topics to discuss. Please be aware before registering and read our terms of service and privacy policy.

    By dismissing this notice and proceeding, you agree to the above.

Warning: Children I Hate Cops... Child Warning... It's Censored But Still

Warning
These pigs who obviously have a shoot first, ask questions later sort of attitude. Even though the kid was running, you can tell it's a fucking kid instantly... like wtf? Poor kid, even though he's black... still. Wait until he's an adult to kill him. Fuckin pounding on the door, kid woke up probably scared to fuckin death. Long ass article and some pictures below.

If you don't want to read the article, the TL;DR version is: Cop shoots black running, kid suffered collapsed lung, lacerated liver and broken ribs but survived. Family is suing the city and will be fucking millionaires for nothing. Mother exploits son for money. The End.
View attachment 759995


The 911 Call That Brought The Police

20 May 2023
Attorneys have released 911 dispatch audio tapes that suggest mistakes were made in the lead-up to police shooting an 11-year-old boy in Mississippi.
It follows last week's release of body camera footage from the moments before Aderrien Murry was shot in his home after calling police for help.
He suffered a collapsed lung, fractured ribs and a lacerated liver. His family is suing the city where it took place.
The officer involved has been cleared of criminal conduct and reinstated.
The flurry of new information about the May 2023 shooting in the city of Indianola follows a nearly seven-month probe by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI).
Last month, the state's attorney general said Sergeant Greg Capers will not face charges after a grand jury determined the bureau's findings showed no evidence of criminal conduct on his part.
Sergeant Capers, who was placed on unpaid administrative leave after the shooting, has since re-joined the Indianola Police Department.
But the Murry family has continued to argue the shooting was not justified, with Aderrien's mother, Nakala, pushing for footage from the incident to be publicly released.
The newly released 911 recordings raise questions about whether Mr Capers knew there was a child in the house when he and another officer responded to domestic disturbance calls placed by Ms Murry's mother, who was not there, and then by Aderrien.
A man later identified as John Nolden, the father of one of Ms Murry's other children, had shown up unexpectedly at the home in the early hours of the morning.
That led a frightened Ms Murry to give her son a cell phone and ask him to call for help, first by informing his grandmother and then by calling 911.
Last Friday, in response to Ms Murry's repeated pleas, state officials released body camera footage of the moments leading up to the shooting of Aderrien.
The video shows Mr Capers approaching the Murry home with a colleague, repeatedly banging on the front door and - with permission from the 911 dispatcher - unsuccessfully attempting to kick it open.
When Ms Murry opens the door, he is heard twice shouting: "Let me see your hands." Ms Murry immediately complies.
"Where's he at?" Mr Capers then asks twice. As Ms Murry gestures inside the home with her head, he asks her to come out of the house and she steps outside.
The officer is then heard repeatedly asking the intruder to come out, adding "don't make us come in".
He also asks if the man is armed, to which Ms Murry appears to respond that he is not.
As Mr Capers enters the empty living room, Aderrien walks into the frame with his hands over his head.
Mr Capers immediately opens fire, shoots him in the chest and then says "Oh, my god".
As the boy screams in pain and runs out the door yelling for his mother, the officer begins calling for an ambulance on his dispatch radio.
"What did I do?" Aderrien is said to have asked his mother after being shot. "I don't want to die."
He spent four days recovering in a local hospital, during which he was placed on a ventilator and given a chest tube.
Sharing his story for the first time in May with Good Morning America (GMA), the child described feeling like he had been struck by "a big punch to the chest".
He also said he had previously wanted to be a police officer but changed his mind after the shooting.
In a December GMA interview, Mr Capers, who is also black, said the shooting was "spur of the moment" and "definitely wasn't intentional".
National law enforcement statistics suggest domestic disturbance calls are dangerous for US police, often leading to officer assaults and even deaths. Experts say that puts them on high alert.
Carlos Moore, an attorney representing the Murry family, said in a statement that the video footage "allows the world to independently assess whether the actions of Greg Capers were justified".
After the MBI declined to release copies of Aderrien's 911 call, saying that it would violate state law, Mr Moore released the tapes himself on Thursday.
The five minutes of audio detail four separate 911 calls, including the first from Aderrien's grandmother and the one placed by the boy himself.
The tapes suggest that the 911 dispatcher may not have conveyed to Mr Capers and his colleague that there was a boy inside the house and it was he who called for help.
"The audio recordings reveal that one caller advised the police that no weapons were involved, and another caller advised that there was a child in the house," Mr Moore said in a statement to The Enterprise-Tocsin local newspaper.
"This crucial information should have been known to the responding officersnd should have informed their approach to the situation."
The city has so far declined to comment on either the video or audio releases.
The Murry family is currently suing the city and its police force for $5m (£3.9m).
The civil rights suit calls for Mr Capers and Indianola Police Chief Ronald Sampson to be fired.
It alleges the responding officers acted with gross negligence and reckless disregard "so outrageous that it shocks the moral and legal conscience of the community".
Indianola police were not immediately available for comment.
View attachment 759998View attachment 760004
View attachment 759996View attachment 759997
Sergeant Greg Capers:
View attachment 760001
Man once again do we allow our "professionals" to have far lower standards than some random joe schmo, this cop should be under the prison, just like literally any civilian that shoots someone unarmed for no reason, "i was startled" is NEVER an excuse, retard shouldnt have even had his finger on the trigger until he spotted the dude that was supposedly violent, he didnt even fucking figure out if anyone was even being violent there, he only found out if someone was there.


While stupid and illegal, simply trespassing shouldnt be a death sentence (obviously it shouldnt also be illegal to shoot someone to protect people actually defending themselves)


So many things wrong with this


I genuinely believe theyll hire literally anyone who walks into the station these days
 
1. Lol guys relax, it looks like he will be taken out via heart attack at 30, it took his fat ass 40 seconds to get up off his shitty couch 😆.

2. judging by that face and his intelligence of "oh cop better fucking run at him full speed" dumb fuckery he won't add to the gene pool of fatherless blacks anyway, your daughters are safe.

3. It's nice to not be a fat retard, dumb mum prolly already spent all their money on lottery tickets and smokes even though hurricane victims get nothing, there's money for this dumb fuck but not those poor buggers ooft.
 
These pigs who obviously have a shoot first, ask questions later sort of attitude. Even though the kid was running, you can tell it's a fucking kid instantly... like wtf? Poor kid, even though he's black... still. Wait until he's an adult to kill him. Fuckin pounding on the door, kid woke up probably scared to fuckin death. Long ass article and some pictures below.

If you don't want to read the article, the TL;DR version is: Cop shoots black running, kid suffered collapsed lung, lacerated liver and broken ribs but survived. Family is suing the city and will be fucking millionaires for nothing. Mother exploits son for money. The End.
View attachment 759995


The 911 Call That Brought The Police

20 May 2023
Attorneys have released 911 dispatch audio tapes that suggest mistakes were made in the lead-up to police shooting an 11-year-old boy in Mississippi.
It follows last week's release of body camera footage from the moments before Aderrien Murry was shot in his home after calling police for help.
He suffered a collapsed lung, fractured ribs and a lacerated liver. His family is suing the city where it took place.
The officer involved has been cleared of criminal conduct and reinstated.
The flurry of new information about the May 2023 shooting in the city of Indianola follows a nearly seven-month probe by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI).
Last month, the state's attorney general said Sergeant Greg Capers will not face charges after a grand jury determined the bureau's findings showed no evidence of criminal conduct on his part.
Sergeant Capers, who was placed on unpaid administrative leave after the shooting, has since re-joined the Indianola Police Department.
But the Murry family has continued to argue the shooting was not justified, with Aderrien's mother, Nakala, pushing for footage from the incident to be publicly released.
The newly released 911 recordings raise questions about whether Mr Capers knew there was a child in the house when he and another officer responded to domestic disturbance calls placed by Ms Murry's mother, who was not there, and then by Aderrien.
A man later identified as John Nolden, the father of one of Ms Murry's other children, had shown up unexpectedly at the home in the early hours of the morning.
That led a frightened Ms Murry to give her son a cell phone and ask him to call for help, first by informing his grandmother and then by calling 911.
Last Friday, in response to Ms Murry's repeated pleas, state officials released body camera footage of the moments leading up to the shooting of Aderrien.
The video shows Mr Capers approaching the Murry home with a colleague, repeatedly banging on the front door and - with permission from the 911 dispatcher - unsuccessfully attempting to kick it open.
When Ms Murry opens the door, he is heard twice shouting: "Let me see your hands." Ms Murry immediately complies.
"Where's he at?" Mr Capers then asks twice. As Ms Murry gestures inside the home with her head, he asks her to come out of the house and she steps outside.
The officer is then heard repeatedly asking the intruder to come out, adding "don't make us come in".
He also asks if the man is armed, to which Ms Murry appears to respond that he is not.
As Mr Capers enters the empty living room, Aderrien walks into the frame with his hands over his head.
Mr Capers immediately opens fire, shoots him in the chest and then says "Oh, my god".
As the boy screams in pain and runs out the door yelling for his mother, the officer begins calling for an ambulance on his dispatch radio.
"What did I do?" Aderrien is said to have asked his mother after being shot. "I don't want to die."
He spent four days recovering in a local hospital, during which he was placed on a ventilator and given a chest tube.
Sharing his story for the first time in May with Good Morning America (GMA), the child described feeling like he had been struck by "a big punch to the chest".
He also said he had previously wanted to be a police officer but changed his mind after the shooting.
In a December GMA interview, Mr Capers, who is also black, said the shooting was "spur of the moment" and "definitely wasn't intentional".
National law enforcement statistics suggest domestic disturbance calls are dangerous for US police, often leading to officer assaults and even deaths. Experts say that puts them on high alert.
Carlos Moore, an attorney representing the Murry family, said in a statement that the video footage "allows the world to independently assess whether the actions of Greg Capers were justified".
After the MBI declined to release copies of Aderrien's 911 call, saying that it would violate state law, Mr Moore released the tapes himself on Thursday.
The five minutes of audio detail four separate 911 calls, including the first from Aderrien's grandmother and the one placed by the boy himself.
The tapes suggest that the 911 dispatcher may not have conveyed to Mr Capers and his colleague that there was a boy inside the house and it was he who called for help.
"The audio recordings reveal that one caller advised the police that no weapons were involved, and another caller advised that there was a child in the house," Mr Moore said in a statement to The Enterprise-Tocsin local newspaper.
"This crucial information should have been known to the responding officersnd should have informed their approach to the situation."
The city has so far declined to comment on either the video or audio releases.
The Murry family is currently suing the city and its police force for $5m (£3.9m).
The civil rights suit calls for Mr Capers and Indianola Police Chief Ronald Sampson to be fired.
It alleges the responding officers acted with gross negligence and reckless disregard "so outrageous that it shocks the moral and legal conscience of the community".
Indianola police were not immediately available for comment.
View attachment 759998View attachment 760004
View attachment 759996View attachment 759997
Sergeant Greg Capers:
View attachment 760001
I laugh at you clowns who call cops pigs and defame them….you know damn well if I can over and knocked your teeth out or some nigger steals you 13” double headed black dildo, you would be calling the cops within minutes.
 
Nah that fat bitch should have taken that little nigglet out with her and or warn the officer about him being inside the house.
 
Wish that kid was white

Cops good. Cops kill niggers.
Rape all white bitches

Cops good. Cops kill niggers.
Rape all white bitches

Nah that fat bitch should have taken that little nigglet out with her and or warn the officer about him being inside the house.
And ur mom should be raped by a pack of us niglets fucking mutant cracker. That’s why y’all going extinct, by 2050 there will be no more cracker race
 
Last edited:
Man once again do we allow our "professionals" to have far lower standards than some random joe schmo, this cop should be under the prison, just like literally any civilian that shoots someone unarmed for no reason, "i was startled" is NEVER an excuse, retard shouldnt have even had his finger on the trigger until he spotted the dude that was supposedly violent, he didnt even fucking figure out if anyone was even being violent there, he only found out if someone was there.


While stupid and illegal, simply trespassing shouldnt be a death sentence (obviously it shouldnt also be illegal to shoot someone to protect people actually defending themselves)


So many things wrong with this


I genuinely believe theyll hire literally anyone who walks into the station these days
You see long ago when we freed the slaves and accepted them into society we lowered the standards of society, now we hire creatures with no frontal lobe to be police officers and hand them weapons.

In my opinion this “kid” being a negro was the silver lining.
 
These pigs who obviously have a shoot first, ask questions later sort of attitude. Even though the kid was running, you can tell it's a fucking kid instantly... like wtf? Poor kid, even though he's black... still. Wait until he's an adult to kill him. Fuckin pounding on the door, kid woke up probably scared to fuckin death. Long ass article and some pictures below.

If you don't want to read the article, the TL;DR version is: Cop shoots black running, kid suffered collapsed lung, lacerated liver and broken ribs but survived. Family is suing the city and will be fucking millionaires for nothing. Mother exploits son for money. The End.
View attachment 759995


The 911 Call That Brought The Police

20 May 2023
Attorneys have released 911 dispatch audio tapes that suggest mistakes were made in the lead-up to police shooting an 11-year-old boy in Mississippi.
It follows last week's release of body camera footage from the moments before Aderrien Murry was shot in his home after calling police for help.
He suffered a collapsed lung, fractured ribs and a lacerated liver. His family is suing the city where it took place.
The officer involved has been cleared of criminal conduct and reinstated.
The flurry of new information about the May 2023 shooting in the city of Indianola follows a nearly seven-month probe by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI).
Last month, the state's attorney general said Sergeant Greg Capers will not face charges after a grand jury determined the bureau's findings showed no evidence of criminal conduct on his part.
Sergeant Capers, who was placed on unpaid administrative leave after the shooting, has since re-joined the Indianola Police Department.
But the Murry family has continued to argue the shooting was not justified, with Aderrien's mother, Nakala, pushing for footage from the incident to be publicly released.
The newly released 911 recordings raise questions about whether Mr Capers knew there was a child in the house when he and another officer responded to domestic disturbance calls placed by Ms Murry's mother, who was not there, and then by Aderrien.
A man later identified as John Nolden, the father of one of Ms Murry's other children, had shown up unexpectedly at the home in the early hours of the morning.
That led a frightened Ms Murry to give her son a cell phone and ask him to call for help, first by informing his grandmother and then by calling 911.
Last Friday, in response to Ms Murry's repeated pleas, state officials released body camera footage of the moments leading up to the shooting of Aderrien.
The video shows Mr Capers approaching the Murry home with a colleague, repeatedly banging on the front door and - with permission from the 911 dispatcher - unsuccessfully attempting to kick it open.
When Ms Murry opens the door, he is heard twice shouting: "Let me see your hands." Ms Murry immediately complies.
"Where's he at?" Mr Capers then asks twice. As Ms Murry gestures inside the home with her head, he asks her to come out of the house and she steps outside.
The officer is then heard repeatedly asking the intruder to come out, adding "don't make us come in".
He also asks if the man is armed, to which Ms Murry appears to respond that he is not.
As Mr Capers enters the empty living room, Aderrien walks into the frame with his hands over his head.
Mr Capers immediately opens fire, shoots him in the chest and then says "Oh, my god".
As the boy screams in pain and runs out the door yelling for his mother, the officer begins calling for an ambulance on his dispatch radio.
"What did I do?" Aderrien is said to have asked his mother after being shot. "I don't want to die."
He spent four days recovering in a local hospital, during which he was placed on a ventilator and given a chest tube.
Sharing his story for the first time in May with Good Morning America (GMA), the child described feeling like he had been struck by "a big punch to the chest".
He also said he had previously wanted to be a police officer but changed his mind after the shooting.
In a December GMA interview, Mr Capers, who is also black, said the shooting was "spur of the moment" and "definitely wasn't intentional".
National law enforcement statistics suggest domestic disturbance calls are dangerous for US police, often leading to officer assaults and even deaths. Experts say that puts them on high alert.
Carlos Moore, an attorney representing the Murry family, said in a statement that the video footage "allows the world to independently assess whether the actions of Greg Capers were justified".
After the MBI declined to release copies of Aderrien's 911 call, saying that it would violate state law, Mr Moore released the tapes himself on Thursday.
The five minutes of audio detail four separate 911 calls, including the first from Aderrien's grandmother and the one placed by the boy himself.
The tapes suggest that the 911 dispatcher may not have conveyed to Mr Capers and his colleague that there was a boy inside the house and it was he who called for help.
"The audio recordings reveal that one caller advised the police that no weapons were involved, and another caller advised that there was a child in the house," Mr Moore said in a statement to The Enterprise-Tocsin local newspaper.
"This crucial information should have been known to the responding officersnd should have informed their approach to the situation."
The city has so far declined to comment on either the video or audio releases.
The Murry family is currently suing the city and its police force for $5m (£3.9m).
The civil rights suit calls for Mr Capers and Indianola Police Chief Ronald Sampson to be fired.
It alleges the responding officers acted with gross negligence and reckless disregard "so outrageous that it shocks the moral and legal conscience of the community".
Indianola police were not immediately available for comment.
View attachment 759998View attachment 760004
View attachment 759996View attachment 759997
Sergeant Greg Capers:
View attachment 760001
1:43 you can see the cop was NOT using gun discipline. Finger clearly on trigger. The discipline of having trigger finger pointing forward and OFF the trigger is to prevent this exact thing.
Also most departments require that officers have atleast 8lbs triggers to avoid accidents like this also Meaning his discharge was intentional.
 
Paul Harvey THE REST OF THE STORY:

Welfare mom had previously beforehand trained her son to run at the cop....just hoping this same situation would play out. If the boy got killed she had 9 others...so one less mouth to feed. A risk she was willing to take. And it paid off. When he gets older the boy will most likely have a " hey! Wait a minute! I could have been killed!" moment....but that will pass. Oh. And this one little bit of news: the policeman was the FATHER of the boy! But he never knew he had a son until visiting the boy in the hospital and seeing the birth records! Now the two have a new and blooming relationship. ( The policeman and the boy's mother are not on speaking terms as we go to press ).

"....and now you know....the REST of the story !!!"

( Paul Harvey is a syndicated columnist and any unauthorized reproductions and/or duplications without the express written consent of Paul Harvey LLC Productions are strictly prohibited ).
PaulHarvey_radio%5B1%5D.jpg
united-states-walt-disney-television-via-getty-images-radio-paul-harvey-began-his-coast-to.webp
 
Last edited:
The cops were set up---the family needed money so they must have deemed it an acceptable loss to sacrifice the kid. When he grows up he will hate his mother for this. But, that's their culture.
 
These pigs who obviously have a shoot first, ask questions later sort of attitude. Even though the kid was running, you can tell it's a fucking kid instantly... like wtf? Poor kid, even though he's black... still. Wait until he's an adult to kill him. Fuckin pounding on the door, kid woke up probably scared to fuckin death. Long ass article and some pictures below.

If you don't want to read the article, the TL;DR version is: Cop shoots black running, kid suffered collapsed lung, lacerated liver and broken ribs but survived. Family is suing the city and will be fucking millionaires for nothing. Mother exploits son for money. The End.
View attachment 759995


The 911 Call That Brought The Police

20 May 2023
Attorneys have released 911 dispatch audio tapes that suggest mistakes were made in the lead-up to police shooting an 11-year-old boy in Mississippi.
It follows last week's release of body camera footage from the moments before Aderrien Murry was shot in his home after calling police for help.
He suffered a collapsed lung, fractured ribs and a lacerated liver. His family is suing the city where it took place.
The officer involved has been cleared of criminal conduct and reinstated.
The flurry of new information about the May 2023 shooting in the city of Indianola follows a nearly seven-month probe by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI).
Last month, the state's attorney general said Sergeant Greg Capers will not face charges after a grand jury determined the bureau's findings showed no evidence of criminal conduct on his part.
Sergeant Capers, who was placed on unpaid administrative leave after the shooting, has since re-joined the Indianola Police Department.
But the Murry family has continued to argue the shooting was not justified, with Aderrien's mother, Nakala, pushing for footage from the incident to be publicly released.
The newly released 911 recordings raise questions about whether Mr Capers knew there was a child in the house when he and another officer responded to domestic disturbance calls placed by Ms Murry's mother, who was not there, and then by Aderrien.
A man later identified as John Nolden, the father of one of Ms Murry's other children, had shown up unexpectedly at the home in the early hours of the morning.
That led a frightened Ms Murry to give her son a cell phone and ask him to call for help, first by informing his grandmother and then by calling 911.
Last Friday, in response to Ms Murry's repeated pleas, state officials released body camera footage of the moments leading up to the shooting of Aderrien.
The video shows Mr Capers approaching the Murry home with a colleague, repeatedly banging on the front door and - with permission from the 911 dispatcher - unsuccessfully attempting to kick it open.
When Ms Murry opens the door, he is heard twice shouting: "Let me see your hands." Ms Murry immediately complies.
"Where's he at?" Mr Capers then asks twice. As Ms Murry gestures inside the home with her head, he asks her to come out of the house and she steps outside.
The officer is then heard repeatedly asking the intruder to come out, adding "don't make us come in".
He also asks if the man is armed, to which Ms Murry appears to respond that he is not.
As Mr Capers enters the empty living room, Aderrien walks into the frame with his hands over his head.
Mr Capers immediately opens fire, shoots him in the chest and then says "Oh, my god".
As the boy screams in pain and runs out the door yelling for his mother, the officer begins calling for an ambulance on his dispatch radio.
"What did I do?" Aderrien is said to have asked his mother after being shot. "I don't want to die."
He spent four days recovering in a local hospital, during which he was placed on a ventilator and given a chest tube.
Sharing his story for the first time in May with Good Morning America (GMA), the child described feeling like he had been struck by "a big punch to the chest".
He also said he had previously wanted to be a police officer but changed his mind after the shooting.
In a December GMA interview, Mr Capers, who is also black, said the shooting was "spur of the moment" and "definitely wasn't intentional".
National law enforcement statistics suggest domestic disturbance calls are dangerous for US police, often leading to officer assaults and even deaths. Experts say that puts them on high alert.
Carlos Moore, an attorney representing the Murry family, said in a statement that the video footage "allows the world to independently assess whether the actions of Greg Capers were justified".
After the MBI declined to release copies of Aderrien's 911 call, saying that it would violate state law, Mr Moore released the tapes himself on Thursday.
The five minutes of audio detail four separate 911 calls, including the first from Aderrien's grandmother and the one placed by the boy himself.
The tapes suggest that the 911 dispatcher may not have conveyed to Mr Capers and his colleague that there was a boy inside the house and it was he who called for help.
"The audio recordings reveal that one caller advised the police that no weapons were involved, and another caller advised that there was a child in the house," Mr Moore said in a statement to The Enterprise-Tocsin local newspaper.
"This crucial information should have been known to the responding officersnd should have informed their approach to the situation."
The city has so far declined to comment on either the video or audio releases.
The Murry family is currently suing the city and its police force for $5m (£3.9m).
The civil rights suit calls for Mr Capers and Indianola Police Chief Ronald Sampson to be fired.
It alleges the responding officers acted with gross negligence and reckless disregard "so outrageous that it shocks the moral and legal conscience of the community".
Indianola police were not immediately available for comment.
View attachment 759998View attachment 760004
View attachment 759996View attachment 759997
Sergeant Greg Capers:
View attachment 760001
Lol if I was in a dark house and someone came running at me they would get shot that little fucker came running at him so quick he had to think quick it could have looked like a midget there’s a lot of midgets in the hood
 
These pigs who obviously have a shoot first, ask questions later sort of attitude. Even though the kid was running, you can tell it's a fucking kid instantly... like wtf? Poor kid, even though he's black... still. Wait until he's an adult to kill him. Fuckin pounding on the door, kid woke up probably scared to fuckin death. Long ass article and some pictures below.

If you don't want to read the article, the TL;DR version is: Cop shoots black running, kid suffered collapsed lung, lacerated liver and broken ribs but survived. Family is suing the city and will be fucking millionaires for nothing. Mother exploits son for money. The End.
View attachment 759995


The 911 Call That Brought The Police

20 May 2023
Attorneys have released 911 dispatch audio tapes that suggest mistakes were made in the lead-up to police shooting an 11-year-old boy in Mississippi.
It follows last week's release of body camera footage from the moments before Aderrien Murry was shot in his home after calling police for help.
He suffered a collapsed lung, fractured ribs and a lacerated liver. His family is suing the city where it took place.
The officer involved has been cleared of criminal conduct and reinstated.
The flurry of new information about the May 2023 shooting in the city of Indianola follows a nearly seven-month probe by the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI).
Last month, the state's attorney general said Sergeant Greg Capers will not face charges after a grand jury determined the bureau's findings showed no evidence of criminal conduct on his part.
Sergeant Capers, who was placed on unpaid administrative leave after the shooting, has since re-joined the Indianola Police Department.
But the Murry family has continued to argue the shooting was not justified, with Aderrien's mother, Nakala, pushing for footage from the incident to be publicly released.
The newly released 911 recordings raise questions about whether Mr Capers knew there was a child in the house when he and another officer responded to domestic disturbance calls placed by Ms Murry's mother, who was not there, and then by Aderrien.
A man later identified as John Nolden, the father of one of Ms Murry's other children, had shown up unexpectedly at the home in the early hours of the morning.
That led a frightened Ms Murry to give her son a cell phone and ask him to call for help, first by informing his grandmother and then by calling 911.
Last Friday, in response to Ms Murry's repeated pleas, state officials released body camera footage of the moments leading up to the shooting of Aderrien.
The video shows Mr Capers approaching the Murry home with a colleague, repeatedly banging on the front door and - with permission from the 911 dispatcher - unsuccessfully attempting to kick it open.
When Ms Murry opens the door, he is heard twice shouting: "Let me see your hands." Ms Murry immediately complies.
"Where's he at?" Mr Capers then asks twice. As Ms Murry gestures inside the home with her head, he asks her to come out of the house and she steps outside.
The officer is then heard repeatedly asking the intruder to come out, adding "don't make us come in".
He also asks if the man is armed, to which Ms Murry appears to respond that he is not.
As Mr Capers enters the empty living room, Aderrien walks into the frame with his hands over his head.
Mr Capers immediately opens fire, shoots him in the chest and then says "Oh, my god".
As the boy screams in pain and runs out the door yelling for his mother, the officer begins calling for an ambulance on his dispatch radio.
"What did I do?" Aderrien is said to have asked his mother after being shot. "I don't want to die."
He spent four days recovering in a local hospital, during which he was placed on a ventilator and given a chest tube.
Sharing his story for the first time in May with Good Morning America (GMA), the child described feeling like he had been struck by "a big punch to the chest".
He also said he had previously wanted to be a police officer but changed his mind after the shooting.
In a December GMA interview, Mr Capers, who is also black, said the shooting was "spur of the moment" and "definitely wasn't intentional".
National law enforcement statistics suggest domestic disturbance calls are dangerous for US police, often leading to officer assaults and even deaths. Experts say that puts them on high alert.
Carlos Moore, an attorney representing the Murry family, said in a statement that the video footage "allows the world to independently assess whether the actions of Greg Capers were justified".
After the MBI declined to release copies of Aderrien's 911 call, saying that it would violate state law, Mr Moore released the tapes himself on Thursday.
The five minutes of audio detail four separate 911 calls, including the first from Aderrien's grandmother and the one placed by the boy himself.
The tapes suggest that the 911 dispatcher may not have conveyed to Mr Capers and his colleague that there was a boy inside the house and it was he who called for help.
"The audio recordings reveal that one caller advised the police that no weapons were involved, and another caller advised that there was a child in the house," Mr Moore said in a statement to The Enterprise-Tocsin local newspaper.
"This crucial information should have been known to the responding officersnd should have informed their approach to the situation."
The city has so far declined to comment on either the video or audio releases.
The Murry family is currently suing the city and its police force for $5m (£3.9m).
The civil rights suit calls for Mr Capers and Indianola Police Chief Ronald Sampson to be fired.
It alleges the responding officers acted with gross negligence and reckless disregard "so outrageous that it shocks the moral and legal conscience of the community".
Indianola police were not immediately available for comment.
View attachment 759998View attachment 760004
View attachment 759996View attachment 759997
Sergeant Greg Capers:
View attachment 760001
Why in the actual fuck would you run towards a police officer in the dark when he has his gun raised , not the police officers fault it was natural instinct
 
Back
Top