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Honolulu police shooting of South African ‘Zulu Prince’ is ruled justified – Officers won’t face charges in fatal shooting of unarmed South African Idol contestant

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The city of Honolulu will not press charges against three police officers who shot dead an unarmed black man in April

Lindani Sanele Myeni, 29, a former contestant on South African Idol, was shot by Honolulu three police offers when they responded to the scene of a break-in call in April.

Prosecutors say force was justified and race didn’t play a role Making the announcement Wednesday, Honolulu City Prosecutor Steven Alm said the use of lethal force was justified in this case

The decision was the result of a months-long investigation into the police shooting of the recent immigrant from South Africa, Lindani Sanele Myeni, Alm said there was no evidence the shooting was racially motivated

Police were responding to a 911 call of a home invasion on April 14, after Myeni entered an Airbnb an Asian couple was renting

Shortly after officers arrived, Myeni was shot dead amid a violent scuffle

There was substantial evidence that Myeni was acting strangely the night of the shooting, Alm said, and was aware he was interacting with police

Myeni continued to punch the responding officers despite being shot with a taser as well as once with a gun
His family has sued the city for wrongful death

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Lindani Sanele Myeni, 29, left, a former contestant on South African Idol, was shot by Honolulu three police offers when they responded to the scene of a break-in call in April. Myeni was unarmed, but the city has just announced that the cops will not be charged because the shooting was justified

Three officers from in Honolulu Police Dept. won’t be charged for the fatal shooting of a 29-year-old unarmed black man after prosecutors said their use of force was justified. Honolulu City Prosecutor Steven Alm made the announcement Wednesday.
Police were responding to a 911 call of a home invasion on April 14, after Myeni entered an Airbnb an Asian couple was renting.
Recently migrated South African, Lindani Myeni also known as Zulu ‘prince’ who also was a former contestant on South African Idol was shot and killed after he allegedly charged at the officers who were responding to the 911 call claiming he had followed a woman into her home.
His family has sued the city for wrongful death.
The officers had responded to the scene of a burglary call in April after the married father of two had entered a house and taken his shoes off, prompting the alarmed occupants the Airbnb to call the police and file a suspicious person report.
Shortly after officers arrived at the house, Myeni was shot dead amid a scuffle where the subject continued to punch the responding officers despite being shot with a taser as well as once with a gun, police said.According to the police report, upon arrival officers found Lindani Sanele Myeni, acting oddly. Myeni eventually tried to open the door to a police cruiser and engaged officers in a violent scuffle, they said.
The decision not to press charges was the result of a months-long investigation into the police shooting of Myeni.
The conclusion Alm announced was that there was no evidence the shooting was racially motivated.
There was substantial evidence that Myeni was acting strangely the night of the shooting, Alm said, and was aware he was interacting with police.

City Prosecutor Steven Alm said the shooting was justified.

The officers were justified in their shooting  City Prosecutor Steven Alm said Wednesday. He also said that after a months-long investigation, prosecutors had determined race wasn’t a factor in the shooting. 
Doorbell and police bodycam camera footage had shown Myeni ignoring commands to get on the ground outside the house he entered, which was an Airbnb where an Asian couple was staying; the woman who called the police said she was worried about a recent uptick in anti-Asian crimes when Myeni showed up at the door.
The camera then shows a stun gun fired by police either malfunctioning or having no effect on Myeni.
It also shows that an officer fired several gunshots at Myeni before identifying themselves as ‘Police!’ 
Myeni was taken to the hospital where he died. The exact time lapse between Myeni arriving at the Airbnb and the fatal shooting is not clear.
Alm called the situation a tragedy, according to the Star-Advertiser.
‘A young man was killed. A family member was killed. This is serious stuff. It also ended with police officers having to kill somebody. And they will have to live with that for the rest of their lives.’ 
Acting Deputy Police Chief Allan Nagata has acknowledged police did not initially identify themselves but said: ‘They were in the fight for their lives. They were very brave. They didn’t shoot or discharge the firearm right away. This was not a case of overreaction.’ 

Honolulu police release body camera footage of fatal shooting of South African Zulu Prince Lindani Myeni in Nuuanu

Alm said officers tried to use non-lethal, non-deadly force before they fired.  
‘Officer 1 was justified in shooting Mr. Myeni in self-defense. Officer 2 was justified in shooting Mr. Myeni in defense of another.’ 
The officers who haven’t been named throughout the course of the investigation, remained anonymous in Wednesday’s findings. 

Honoluluwill not pursue charges against the officers who shot and killed unarmed 29-year-old African Idol contestant Lindani Myeni in April, s City Prosecutor Steven Alm called the shooting ‘justified’
Lindani and Lindsay Myeni with their children. He was shot by police in a shooting the city prosecutor says was justified
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Myeni, from the Zulu Kingdom in South Africa, married to a US national was shot by officers responding to a 911 call of a couple who said he entered the Airbnb they were renting. Myeni and his wife Lindsay had just moved to the US in January

Police had been responding to a 911 call on April 14 from Shiying ‘Sabine’ Wang who said Myeni had entered the Airbnb she was renting with her husband Da Ju ‘Dexter’ Wang in the Nuuanu neighborhood of Honolulu after he followed the couple in their car. 
The 29-year-old’s attorney has said Myeni mistook the home for the ISKCON Hawaii Hare Krishna temple, which is next door to the Airbnb on Coelho Way.
Alm used police body camera footage from the responding officers in his presentation to indicate that they had little choice but to shoot Myeni, after attempting to subdue him by non-lethal means. 
Among the findings, he noted that after the officers arrived, Myeni was acting strange and told them he ‘was not afraid’ of police, indicating that he was aware of who they were, after they told him to lie on the ground.

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Upon arrival one officer yells repeatedly for Myeni to get on the ground. Shots ring out and then after a pause, an officer said, ‘police.’ Alm, however, said Myeni appeared to be aware he was dealing with law enforcement
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Myeni was shot with taser and then once with a firearm, but continued to fight the officers. Alm said the officers were justified when they shot him another three times Honolulu PD release new bodycam of Lindani Myeni shooting. He used police bodycam footage to illustrate that the officers had no choice to shoot Myeni.

Myeni was shot with taser and then once with a firearm, but continued to fight the officers, Alm said.
The officers were justified when they shot him another three times. He used police bodycam footage to illustrate that the officers had no choice to shoot Myeni.
Additionally, he said, Myeni was stronger than any one of the responding officers and was able to overpower them in the scuffle, with the most seriously injured officer suffering a concussion. He has yet to return to work.
Myeni continued to fight with the officers despite being shot with a taser and once with a firearm. He was then shot another three times, killing him.  
Myeni’s wife Lindsay Myeni, who was born in the US but met her husband while she was on missionary work in South Africa, told Hawaii News Now in April that she does not know what led him to visit the home.
However, she dismissed the claims that he was there to commit burglary, describing him as the ‘most gentle person’ and suggesting different cultural norms may have meant his actions were misunderstood by the residents.
Myeni is from the Zulu Kingdom where it is customary for people to visit ‘anyone’s house’, she told the outlet.
‘In Zulu culture you can go to anyone’s house. You can knock on anyone’s door. It doesn’t matter if it’s 8 o’clock it’s not a big deal. Neighbor are neighbors,’ she said.
Lindsay added in April that the police account that he took off his shoes shows he believed he was showing the homeowners respect.
‘It says he took off his shoes. I’m sure he did that as a sign of respect,’ she told the outlet.
Lindsay said her husband had been on his way home to the house they shared with their two children just down the street from the now-crime scene.
He had been at the Pali Lookout earlier that day and seemed his usual self, she said, adding she had spoken to him less than 20 minutes before the incident unfolded.   

 Myeni on a beach in Waimanalo, Hawaii with his wife, Lindsay, and their two young children. Lindani Myeni, [right, in photo with wife Lindsay], a Prince from the Zulu Kingdom in South Africa and married father-of-two was fatally shot by Honolulu police in Janaury
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Myeni’s wife Lindsay and other members of his family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city. Their attorney on Wednesday said the prosecutors’ findings would not affect the suit 

Bowser said Sabine dialed 911 because she believed Myeni was at their residence to attack them amid a string of anti-Asian hate crimes plaguing the nation.    
According to Brower, footage released in April by the an attorney for Myeni’s family – which showed him repeatedly apologizing to the Wangs after entering the home – only captured part of the incident, excluding the nearly six minutes when he was inside. 
During that time Brower said Myeni rummaged through two bedrooms and told the couple that he owned the home as well as the 10-year-old cat that lives there.
‘This Myeni had said to Sabine when he first arrived that “I have video on you, you know why I am here,”‘ Brower said.
‘They never recognized him before. He followed them to the house, and at some point Sabine turned around, he ducked in and tried to make it look like he was taking off his shoes. It is clear that when he ducked down it was evasive, and that’s how my client Sabine recognized it.’
Door cam footage shows 29-year-old man who was shot by police approaching home whose occupants called 911  
An attorney for Myeni’s family, James J. Bickerton, obtained and released never-before-seen footage from a surveillance camera at the home, providing new details in mid June of the events that led up to the fatal encounter. 
It shows Myeni following  Shiying ‘Sabine’ Wang and her husband Da Ju ‘Dexter’ toward the porch of the home they were renting, taking off his shoes and entering the property after them. He appears to be calm.
He then quickly leaves after his presence appears to have confused the Airbnb occupants, repeatedly saying ‘sorry’
Seconds later, the female occupant runs out and points Myeni out to police officers, who are responding to a 911 call about Myeni entering the property. Police bodycam footage previously released shows what happened next.

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Newly-released doorcam footage has shown South Africa Idol contestant and Zulu ‘prince’ Lindani Myeni repeatedly apologizing to a couple after entering their Airbnb in Honolulu, moments before police shot him dead.

It shows Myeni ignoring commands to get on the ground outside the house he entered, a stun gun fired by police either malfunctioning or having no effect on Myeni. 
It also shows that an officer fired several gunshots at the black man before identifying themselves as ‘Police!’ 
Myeni was taken to hospital where he died. The exact time lapse between Myeni arriving at the Airbnb and the fatal shooting is not clear.
The footage released Tuesday has some lapses in time and is edited, merging parts of the doorcam, 911 call and bodycam.  
Police had previously released short clips of body camera footage and the 911 call made by the female occupant of the Airbnb – but made no mention of the doorcam footage. 
The family attorney claims Honolulu Police reviewed the doorcam footage on the night Myeni was shot dead and went to court to block its release. Doorbell camera captures moments leading up to Myeni shooting.
Bickerton says Myeni mistook the home for the ISKCON Hawaii Hare Krishna temple, which is next door to the Airbnb on Coelho Way.
Myeni’s wife has previously said her husband took off his shoes as a mark of respect – as she said is customary in the Zulu Kingdom.  

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The couple – Shiying ‘Sabine’ Wang and her husband Da Ju ‘Dexter’ Wang – are seen walking up to the front door of the property.
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Myeni is seen walking up behind them. He is wearing a face mask and his umqhele, a traditional Zulu headband

The doorbell footage begins with the lights of two vehicles pulling up outside the Airbnb at 91 Coehlo Way at 8.07pm.
The captions on the footage say that the address is next door to a temple, which has a similar semi-circular driveway and columns
The couple – Shiying ‘Sabine’ Wang and her husband Da Ju ‘Dexter’ Wang – are seen walking up to the front door of the property. According to depositions in the lawsuit, the man and woman were tourists staying in the multi-unit dwelling, the lawyers said. It’s not clear where the couple was visiting from.
Dexter is ahead of his wife. Myeni is then seen walking up behind them. He is wearing a face mask and his umqhele, a traditional Zulu headband.
Dexter opens the door and enters followed by Sabine, who turns and watches as Myeni stops at the porch and bends to take off his shoes. She pauses and watches him before following her husband inside the property.

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Myeni calmly stops at the porch and bends to take off his shoes before strolling in after them 

Myeni slowly takes off his shoes and strolls in after them.  
Voices are heard from inside the home, but they are unclear in the recording
Moments later, Myeni exits the property and stands, still wearing his mask, looking back inside. 
Sabine is heard making a 911 call – although Myeni’s lawyer says the first one heard of the tape is just pretend; she doesn’t actually call 911 until a bit later. 
‘Hello, someone just break in, breaking into my house… he’s in front of our door,’ she says, as Myeni stands outside.
The doorcam cuts out at this point, according to the lawyers. It is 8.09pm.
Sabine then actually called 911 and told an operator about the man: That call was recorded by 911 dispatch.
The 911 audio – which was previously released – captures Dexter in the background saying: ‘We have no temple.’ 
Sabine is heard saying: ‘Please leave.’ 
When asked who is in the property, the woman replies to say: ‘He says Lindon from South Africa.’ 
She adds that she does not know if the man knows the owner of the home they are renting as an Airbnb.
The operator asks if he has any weapons in his hands to which she replies, ‘No.’
She also confirms he is not yelling at them. 
The footage released by the attorney moves back to the doorcam at this stage.
At this point, Myeni is seen walking back out of the property and turning to ask: ‘What’s wrong?’  
‘Who are you?’ shouts Sabine, sounding more hysterical.
Myeni then repeatedly says: ‘I’m sorry.’
‘I know you guys though. May I see your phone?’ he adds.
Sabine is heard on the 911 call saying he tried to go outside. 
Dexter is heard saying: ‘My wife is so afraid and I don’t know what’s going on. I don’t know. He said his name is Lindon.’
The attorney said he was on the phone to the Airbnb owner James H. Hall.

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Voices are heard from inside the home but they are unclear. Moments later, Myeni exits the property and stands, still wearing his mask, looking back inside. Sabine is heard appearing to pretend to make a 911 call claiming ‘someone just break in’
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The occupants of the Airbnb then call 911. Myeni is then seen calmly walking out of the home repeatedly apologizing
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He puts his shoes back on and walks back in the direction of his car, again apologizing: ‘Sorry’

Myeni is then seen calmly walking out of the home. He puts his shoes back on and walks back in the direction of his car, again apologizing: ‘Sorry.’
Dexter calmly walks out to see where he has gone and tells Hall: ‘He apologized and he just left.’  
The video released by the family attorney shows the doorcam and the police bodycam footage side by side, giving different perspectives of the same moment and what happens next.
In the doorcam, Sabine runs out of the front door and points at Myeni in the distance saying ‘that’s him’ as the officers arrived on the scene. Neither Myeni nor the officers are visible in this footage. 
In the bodycam, Sabine’s voice can be heard and the outline of a man – now known to be Myeni – is seen in front of the officer. 
‘Get on the ground now,’ one officer is heard repeatedly saying.
‘Who are you? Who are you?’ Myeni asks.  
Police bodycam footage previously released shows none of the officers identified themselves as police until they had already fired three gunshots at Myeni. 
It was also pitch black outside at the time.
Following the shooting, police initially said they had responded to a home invasion. They said Myeni’s strange behavior frightened the occupants and that he violently attacked responding police officers, leaving one hospitalized with a concussion.
Myeni’s family say he would not have known the people shining bright lights in his eyes in the darkness were police. 
He likely mistook the house for a similar looking dwelling that houses a temple next door that’s open to the public, the lawsuit said.

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