HOUSTON (AP) — A Houston police officer shot and killed a one-armed,
one-legged man in a wheelchair Saturday inside a group home after police
say the double amputee threatened the officer and aggressively waved a
metal object that turned out to be a pen.
Police spokeswoman Jodi
Silva said the man cornered the officer in his wheelchair and was making
threats while trying to stab the officer with the pen. At the time, the
officer did not know what the metal object was that the man was waving,
Silva said.
She said the man came "within inches to a foot" of the officer and did not follow instructions to calm down and remain still.
"Fearing for his partner's safety and his own safety, he discharged his weapon," Silva told The Associated Press.
Police
did not immediately release the name of the man who was killed. They
had been called to the home after a caretaker there called and reported
that the man in wheelchair was causing a disturbance.
The owner of
the group home, John Garcia, told the Houston Chronicle that the man
had a history of mental illness and had been living at the house about
18 months. Garcia said the man had told him that he lost a leg above the
knee and all of one arm when he was hit by a train.
"He sometimes would go off a bit, but you just ignore it," Garcia told the newspaper.
Silva
identified the officer as Matthew Jacob Marin, a five-year veteran of
the department. He was immediately placed on three-day administrative
leave, which is standard in all shootings involving officers.
Houston
police records indicate that Marin also fatally shot a suspect in 2009.
Investigators at the time said Marin came upon a man stabbing his
neighbor to death at an apartment complex and opened fired when the
suspect refused to drop the knife.
On Saturday, Marin and his
partner arrived at the group home around 2:30 a.m. Silva said there were
several people at the house at the time. The caretaker who called
police waited on the porch while the officers went inside, she said.
"It
was close quarters in the area of the house," Silva said. "The officer
was forced into an area where he had no way to get out."
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