LASD shoots Miguel De Los Santos when armed with a knife and metal trash can

2 years ago
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A Filipino-American family is seeking answers after their 27-year-old son was shot multiple times during an encounter with Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department (LASD) deputies in late April.

In the early morning of Friday, April 23, Miguel Delos Santos was experiencing a mental health emergency, and his family called 911 in hopes that medical professionals could alleviate his symptoms and transfer him to a safer space.

But what transpired was a nightmare — and it is still ongoing. Delos Santos’ fiance, Cielo Zavala Esquivel, found him lying on their bedroom floor in a fetal position, and he was reportedly unresponsive and incoherent.

Esquivel was the one who called 911 and just as the paramedics arrived, Delos Santos allegedly stumbled into the hallway of their South L.A. home, found a nearby pen and attempted to stab himself in the neck with it.

LASD deputies were also on the scene and were able to restrain Delos Santos, and he was then transported via ambulance for treatment at St. Francis Medical Center in Lynwood.

Following the incident, around 4 p.m. that same day, Delos Santos was discharged from the hospital, and Esquivel found him at the front of their home, but he did not appear to be well.

The lawyer representing Delos Santos’ family, Claire Espina, recounted the events to The Asian Journal.

“She let him in, but it did not seem like he should have been released,” she said.

Espina said that he was still incoherent, paranoid and delusional, claiming that “people were out to get him.”

Delos Santos was not showing any signs of violent behavior, but his fiance was still very concerned for his safety, so she once again called 911 after failing to return him to a calmer state of mind.

The 27-year-old was said to have complied with both paramedics and LASD deputies and was taken away by an ambulance for a second time.

However, less than an hour passed, and Delos Santos was back at home, continuing to voice his fears that “people were trying to kill him,” according to Espina.

For a third time, Esquivel called for help, and the paramedics and deputies showed up with a mental health evaluation team. For about three hours, they begged Delos Santos to leave the house, but he managed to escape through a side door at around 8 p.m.

As he began making his way to the gate of their front yard, Esquivel recalled hearing five or six gunshots, before her fiance fell to the ground.

A report from the LASD’s homicide investigators alleged that Delos Santos — who is not referenced in the report by name — was “holding a butcher’s knife in each hand but refused to drop the knives.”

The report claimed that a “40mm less-lethal stun round” was used to stop him, but it was unsuccessful. It asserted that the “suspect” began charging at the deputies, causing them to deploy two more tasers, which also had no effect.

“The man continued to charge at the deputies, with both knives still in hand, when a deputy-involved shooting occurred,” the report said.

Esquivel did not recall anything close to the events outlined in this report. She said she did not see Delos Santos holding any knives in his hands, nor did she see him charge at an officer.

After the shooting, Delos Santos was transported to the same Lynwood hospital, undergoing a series of surgeries, as the gunshot wounds punctured several vital organs, including his right kidney and liver.

As of Wednesday, May 12, it is still unclear whether Delos Santos will fully recover from his serious injuries.

Espina described his current condition, which is quite severe. The bullets hit his torso and lower left side, reportedly destroying his right kidney, and obliterating 15% of his liver.

Espina said that his leg is fractured and that there is a bullet lodged in his spine, as well as pelvis.

“Is this how you respond to someone who is obviously having a medical or psychological crisis? These are issues that need to be looked at,” she said.

Espina told The Asian Journal that she is taking the mental health component into serious consideration, because it’s well-known that “most mental health encounters with law enforcement result in death of serious bodily injury.”

Those with untreated serious mental illness are 16 times more likely to be killed by law enforcement than other civilians, according to a 2015 study by the Treatment Advocacy Center.
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