State investigators on Monday began the lengthy process of reconstructing what happened when Minneapolis police fatally shot a man outside a home, as more details about the encounter emerged.
Police had been to the North Side home as recently as two weeks ago for an unspecified emergency, according to a Fire Department report.
The report says officers, paramedics and firefighters were dispatched to the house in the 3100 block of N. Thomas Avenue in the early morning hours of Dec. 1, although a firetruck that responded was sent away shortly after arriving on the scene. The report offered no other details about the nature of the call, one of at least four times this year that firefighters were dispatched to the address.
Officers returned to the home shortly after 3 a.m. Sunday after police say a man fired a gun inside, sending frightened residents outside into the cold night. Officials said that after a brief standoff, the man emerged from the house holding a "long gun." It's unclear whether he fired his weapon.
No one was allowed near the house on Sunday, but several photos showing the front riddled with dozens of bullet holes appeared on social media on Monday.
As of Monday, authorities hadn't released the names of the officers involved or the man who died. But, in an interview earlier in the day with Minnesota Public Radio, the victim's wife identified him as Chiasher Fong Vue, 52. She told MPR that she didn't believe her husband had posed a threat to the officers.
The victim's family declined to comment when contacted by the Star Tribune on Monday.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension (BCA), which investigates most police shootings in the state, said it would release the names of the officers after it has interviewed them. A source familiar with the investigation said that nine officers have been placed on standard administrative leave. Eight of them fired their handguns, while one shot a less-lethal weapon, according to the source.