Credit: Alex Zielinski
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Alex Zielinski

Police accountability advocates gathered on the corner of SE Grand and Washington this afternoon to hold a small vigil for the man shot last night by police at the nearby Cityteam homeless shelter. Attendees held signs decrying police violence and talked about the โ€œsloppyโ€ nature of the shooting while men whoโ€™d witnessed the shooting watched from outside of the temporarily-closed shelter.

โ€œIt was intense,โ€ said Kirk Smith, whoโ€™s been living at the short-term shelter for a month. He was inside the shelter last night when the now-deceased man entered, shirtless. Smith said the man was โ€œtwitching and freaking outโ€ when he came inside.

โ€œHe looked crazed, you could tell he was looking for help,โ€ Smith said. A shelter volunteer gave the man a jacket, Smith added.

Then, as the room full of men watched, the man began cutting his own neck with a knife, Smith said. โ€œThere was blood running down all over him,โ€ Smith said. Smith was the one that ran outside to alert the police, who were already on the search for a carjacking suspect in the area.

According to Smith, around eight police officers entered the shelter with semi-automatic rifles pointed at the man (who they suspected was the carjacker). After the man waved his knife at a police dog who had entered the building, the officers shot him. This piece of the story has yet to be confirmed by police.

Smith, who hasnโ€™t slept since Friday night due to the incident, doesnโ€™t understand the officers’ logic.

โ€œThe guy was begging for help, he was suicidal,โ€ he said. โ€œThey could have Tased him, taken to get some help. They didnโ€™t need to shoot him.โ€

Erik Clemson was also inside the shelter during the shooting, a moment he described as โ€œsurreal,โ€ like he was watching it in slow-motion. When cops showed up, Clemson said, โ€œIt escalated so quicklyโ€”and I think thatโ€™s what [the police] wanted to happen.” Clemson agreed with Smith that it wasn’t the best way to handle what appeared to be a clear mental health crisis.

Portland police plan on releasing the name of the officers involved in the shooting this evening.

Alex Zielinski is a former News Editor for the Portland Mercury. She's here to tell stories about economic inequities, cops, civil rights, and weird city politics that you should probably be paying attention...