PASCO, Wash. — A county coroner in southeastern Washington said Friday he plans to order an inquest into a deadly police shooting in hopes of defusing rising tensions.
The family of an orchard worker killed Tuesday after he was accused of hurling rocks at police has filed a $25 million claim with the city of Pasco and the president of Mexico reiterated his country's condemnation of the violence against a Mexican citizen.
Police involved in the investigation confirmed Friday that Antonio Zambrano-Montes was not armed with either a gun or a knife. Whether he had a rock in his hand when he was shot is still under investigation, Kennewick police Sgt. Ken Lattin said.
Lattin, the spokesman for a group of outside police agencies investigating the shooting, appealed for calm.
"Our constitution allows people to gather and protest. That is perfectly OK," Lattin said of a march planned for Saturday. "Be respectful of others, their person, their property."
Witnesses have said the man was running away when police fired. Some people who saw the shooting at a busy intersection videotaped the confrontation.
Franklin County Coroner Dan Blasdel told The Associated Press in a telephone interview Friday night that he's decided to order an inquest, which would be open to the public, in hopes of calming "some of the fears and outrage of the community."
While an inquest won't proceed until police finish gathering evidence and witness statements, "it's going to make this whole investigation transparent," Blasdel said. Also needed will be pathology and toxicology reports expected to take six to eight weeks.