Ignoring police calls to surrender in favor of a final, frantic showdown, Terrence Franklin charged at police officers and knocked one to the floor, setting off an all-out brawl in the darkened basement of an Uptown house seconds before he was killed, according to a police account released Thursday evening.
The account, coming just hours Thursday after a Hennepin County grand jury cleared Minneapolis police officers of any wrongdoing in the fatal May 10 shooting, is the first explanation from the department of how 22-year-old Terrence Franklin, who was wanted for questioning in a burglary case, ended up dead when five police officers found him hiding in a basement.
"Mr. Franklin's actions dictated the outcome of that day," said Police Chief Janeé Harteau, who was criticized in the days after the shooting for not providing details of the incident.
Speaking to that criticism on Thursday, Harteau said the process required that she not speak until the grand jury completed its review.
"I would have loved nothing more to speak as soon as I could, and this is as soon as I could do so in the right way. It's about the facts, it's not about speed," she said.
Among the details released Thursday: Franklin was shot eight times by two officers. He charged at an officer who was armed with an MP5 machine gun, knocking that officer to the floor. None of the officers was carrying Tasers.
Franklin fired twice, hitting two officers in the legs. Both officers survived but have not yet fully recovered from their injuries.
The grand jury reached its decision after two days of testimony and 19 witnesses, Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman announced Thursday. Franklin family attorney Mike Padden said Thursday that he's looking forward to police releasing evidence so he can begin with a wrongful-death lawsuit on behalf of Franklin's family.