Zone1 Off-duty security officer reportedly fired at least seven shots at Kent-Meridian High student

NewsVine_Mariyam

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This story unfortunately raised the specter of many conversations I've had on this very message board.

The shooter in this case is a textbook example of the very specific kind of person that I have warned others about because he, like many of the people here, do not understand or perhaps even realize that there is a difference in a law allowing you to carry a weapon and the laws surrounding when you can use that weapon to inflict deadly force upon another.

This news story is different in a couple of way than the original one I read in which the reporter reiterated the fact that even though Myers was issuing orders and had his gun trained on the 3 alleged "suspects", he had NO LAWFUL AUTHORITY to carry out any of the acts he did. After he shot the victim Hazrat Ali Rohani, a 17 year old Kent-Meridian high school student, it was reported that he stood over him and shot him several more times, including 6 times in the back. Rohani died at the scene and Myers is being held on 2 millions dollars bond:

A 51-year-old Newcastle man faces a second-degree murder charge for the Renton shooting June 5 of Hazrat Ali Rohani, 17, a Kent-Meridian High School student.​
Aaron Brown Myers also faces charges of second-degree assault and firearm enhancements with each charge, according to King Count Superior Court documents filed Monday, June 10.​
Myers is accused of shooting Hazrat outside Big 5 Sporting Goods. The Renton Police Department arrested Myers at the scene in the 600 block of South Grady Way on the evening of June 5.​
According to the King County Medical Examiner’s Office, Hazrat, of Kent, died as a result of multiple gunshot wounds. The medical examiner’s office identified his death as a homicide.​
Myers is scheduled to be arraigned at 9 a.m. June 24 in the GA Courtroom of the Maleng Regional Justice Center in Kent, according to the King County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office. He remains in the King County Correctional Facility in Seattle with bail set at $2 million.​
“The defendant took it upon himself to conduct ‘overwatch’ in a Renton parking lot, despite the fact that he is not a member of law enforcement and thus has not been trained how to safely prevent crime,” wrote Senior Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Lauren M. Burke in charging documents. “The defendant observed three teenagers walking through the parking lot of a sporting goods store, one of whom had an airsoft gun in his pocket, and immediately assumed that the teenagers must be about to commit a violent robbery.​
“Rather than calling 911 or waiting for any evidence at all that could confirm or deny his assumption, he claimed he had a ‘duty to intervene’ and did so.”
Burke wrote that Myers exited his vehicle, pointed his firearm at the three teenagers, and rapidly approached them. Despite the fact that he had no authority to do so and the teens had committed no crime, he commanded them to stop, drop their guns and get on the ground.
The teens complied, Burke wrote, putting their hands in the air and placing the airsoft pistol he’d seen on the ground, and telling him it was just a BB gun.​
But Myers allegedly tackled one teen to the ground (which resulted in the assault charge) and pinned him to the ground while still holding his gun on the other two teens, according to court documents.​
Hazrat had his hands in the air and was backing away, Burke wrote. As Hazrat turned from Myers, he reportedly fired at least seven rounds into the teen, striking him once in the side and least six times in the back.​
According to court documents, Renton Police Department officers were dispatched at approximately 7:38 p.m. June 5 to a reported shooting outside of Big 5 Sporting Goods. Officers arrived and contacted Myers at the scene.​
According to documents, in an interview with police, Myers advised he works as an armed security officer, and on June 5, brought his son to attend class at a jiu-jitsu and martial arts location. Myers, who was not on duty as a security officer, indicated to detectives in the interview that he conducted “overwatch” at the location as a result of having seen crimes occur in the parking lot in the past.​
Surveillance footage showed Myers approaching the minors, including Hazrat, in front of the store with a handgun raised and aimed. According to documents, footage showed one of the teens setting a firearm, identified as a BB gun, on the sidewalk and extending his arms in front of himself with his hands open, showing he held nothing in his hands.​
Footage showed Myers push the boy to the ground and straddle him, holding him with his left hand by the back of his jacket, and aiming his gun at Hazrat, according to documents. Footage showed Hazrat in view of the camera with his fingers extended, showing he held nothing in his hands. After Hazrat backed out of view of the camera, Myers fired his handgun multiple times.​
Seconds after Myers fired shots, police arrived at the scene and detained him.​
According to a social media post from the Renton Police Department, King County Sheriff’s Office deputies conducting a training in the area heard the shooting and responded immediately, beginning lifesaving measures on Hazrat. Hazrat died at the scene.​
“The video shows Hazrat with his left hand raised above his head and his right arm briefly lowers to his waist area,” documents stated. “Immediately after [Hazrat] is seen, on video, with his hand on the waist area it is clear that he has been shot because he abruptly jerks his body away from Myers and falls to the ground.”​
According to documents, surveillance footage captured of the incident contradicted Myers’s statements in his interview with police.​
As Myers sat in his vehicle, he saw three individuals walk in front of his parked vehicle, and saw what he believed as one of the boys being in possession of a firearm, Myers said to police, according to documents. Myers believed the three aimed to commit “armed robbery” at the location, and he felt he lacked the time to call 911, and that “he had a duty to act to stop the individuals from hurting someone innocent, and to protect his son who was in the location next door,” documents stated.​
Myers said to police that he exited his vehicle with his gun aimed at the individuals, and the three turned after hearing Myers exit his vehicle. Myers said he provided commands to the three boys, telling them to drop their firearms and put their hands up. He saw the boy holding the firearm throw the gun to the side, according to documents. Myers stated to police he restrained the boy as he did not want him to grab the firearm, according to documents.​
Myers said he continued to provide commands to the three boys to put their hands up, but they were not listening to his commands. Myers said he shot Hazrat after Hazrat reached into his waistband, stating he thought that Hazrat was going to kill him. In his interview with police, Myers stated the three boys never complied with his commands to put their hands up, according to documents.​
In interviews with the two additional teens involved, the teens stated to detectives that the firearms were airsoft guns, with the three heading to Big 5 Sporting Goods to return and exchange an airsoft gun and receive assistance with a magazine issue. The teens stated to detectives they informed Myers numerous times that the firearms served as “BB guns” prior to the shooting.
According to court documents, Myers chose to intervene in another incident in March 2022. He mistakenly believed someone was armed and followed a person carrying a metal object that he believed to be a gun from one store, through another store and away from the second store. In that case, he called 911 and officers responded.
The officers determined the person Myers was following did not have a gun and posed no threat. Nobody was injured.
[snipped]​
Renton Reporter reporter Benjamin Leung contributed to this article.

 
  • Informative
Reactions: IM2
More Darwin Awards go out to winning contestants.




Kent has one of the fewest officers per capita for Puget Sound cities, with just 1.2 officers per 1,000 people, compared to 1.8 for Everett, 1.6 for Seattle, and 1.5 for Tacoma.


“We simply don’t have the resources to do the preventative patrols, presence,” Padilla told KIRO 7. “Right now, we’re just keeping up with 911 calls.”


Don't like these types of incidents then don't defund police and round up gangsters and thugs, eh?

And, let's see pics of the guns and the 'kids'.
 
We covered this once but it didn't note he had shot 7 times.

My position still has not changed. He was sitting and waiting to shoot someone. Thought of himself as some stupid cowboy hero.

It better be many years in prison for him.
 
Let’s see the video. Do we even know the race of anyone involved?

What were the initial reports about Micheal Brown? “Hands up don’t shoot”……
……feel like I’ve already heard this story before.

If he killed someone under circumstances that weren’t justified, then he needs to be prosecuted. Cases like that are a tiny minority of homicide cases.
 
Let’s see the video. Do we even know the race of anyone involved?

What were the initial reports about Micheal Brown? “Hands up don’t shoot”……
……feel like I’ve already heard this story before.

If he killed someone under circumstances that weren’t justified, then he needs to be prosecuted. Cases like that are a tiny minority of homicide cases.

That, and who returns pistols by walking in with them stuck in their waistbands? Regular people would have it in the box it came in or in a sack or both.
 
I googled 'Kent Teen shot' and got a whole slew of stories; no wonder the paranoia level is high there.
 
I'm sure he was mentally prepared for the moment when he would need to step in and take action. He envisioned himself, with his trusty hand gun, taking down all the bad guys. Pew pew pew! Take down all the bad guys, lower his sunglasses, and maybe throw in a sweet catch phrase. He was going to look so cool.

This was the moment he was waiting for, he thought. It was his time to shine. Aaaaand now he's going to jail. Congratulations.
 
We covered this once but it didn't note he had shot 7 times.

My position still has not changed. He was sitting and waiting to shoot someone. Thought of himself as some stupid cowboy hero.

It better be many years in prison for him.
And Myers, the shooter, had contact with the police on a previous occasion because he erroneously suspected someone of being up to no good and getting ready to commit a crime. The police arrived to discover the person he was surveilling was not and had not committed a crime.

This is so sickening because he had no right or business ever even pointing a firearm at these high schoolers, let alone pulling the trigger.
 
I'm sure he was mentally prepared for the moment when he would need to step in and take action. He envisioned himself, with his trusty hand gun, taking down all the bad guys. Pew pew pew! Take down all the bad guys, lower his sunglasses, and maybe throw in a sweet catch phrase. He was going to look so cool.

This was the moment he was waiting for, he thought. It was his time to shine. Aaaaand now he's going to jail. Congratulations.
Yeah unfortunately this wasn't his first "stake-out" :-(
 
Under fund the police and keep letting criminal vermin go and people pretty much have to do their own policing, so tough shit for those demographics who worship thuggz culture and glorify it. The guy should have to spend a couple of Saturdays picking up trash and that's it.
 
More Darwin Awards go out to winning contestants.




Kent has one of the fewest officers per capita for Puget Sound cities, with just 1.2 officers per 1,000 people, compared to 1.8 for Everett, 1.6 for Seattle, and 1.5 for Tacoma.


“We simply don’t have the resources to do the preventative patrols, presence,” Padilla told KIRO 7. “Right now, we’re just keeping up with 911 calls.”


Don't like these types of incidents then don't defund police and round up gangsters and thugs, eh?

And, let's see pics of the guns and the 'kids'.
This has nothing to do with lack of law enforcement or defunding the police.
 
lol Kent is around 30% 'foreign born', has high violent crime rates, and the 'victim' isn't named John Smith.
 
That, and who returns pistols by walking in with them stuck in their waistbands? Regular people would have it in the box it came in or in a sack or both.
Washington is an open carry state. The only person in the wrong in this scenario was the off duty armed security officer POS who apparently didn't bother to find out what acts his license and firearm endorsement actually allow him to lawfully carry out.

Oh and by the way, Myers had just been appointed to a position on a public safety committee with the city of Newcastle. Apparently no one knew that Myers is the one that others needed to be on the lookout for in regards to their own personal safety. The city of Newcastle is not happy about how this backfired and bit them in the rear and I'm not allowed to express what I really think of Myer's defense attorney. This story following the training manual:

https://cjtc.wa.gov/docs/default-so...t-study-guide-sept-2018.pdf?sfvrsn=7f9ff377_1

June 12, 2024 at 4:22 pm
By Catalina Gaitán
Seattle Times staff reporter
Newcastle removed Aaron Brown Myers from the city’s public safety committee Tuesday, a day after he was charged with shooting and killing a teenager who was trying to return a malfunctioning airsoft gun at a Renton strip mall.
The June 5 shooting happened just a day after the city publicly announced the committee, which was created in early April.
“It was with deep regret and sadness that the City of Newcastle learned of the fatal shooting of Hazrat Ali Rohani,” City Manager Scott Pingel said in a statement Tuesday. “Mayor [Robert] Clark has removed Mr. Myers from the Committee, and he will no longer participate in its activities.”
Rohani, a 17-year-old Kent-Meridian High School student, was heading toward a Big 5 Sporting Goods store with two friends when Myers, an off-duty security guard, approached them with his gun raised, according to a probable cause affidavit. Prosecutors said Myers tackled one of the boys, then turned his Glock 19 at Rohani and fired at least seven times.
Rohani died with one gunshot wound to his side and at least six to his back, court records show.
Prosecutors charged Myers with second-degree murder. His arraignment is scheduled for June 24.
Related Off-duty guard charged in fatal shooting of teen in Renton parking lot
Myers’ attorney, Zachary C. Wagnild, said Myers — a “professional security consultant” — fired at Rohani in self-defense.
“Myers sincerely believed that he was witnessing the beginning of an armed robbery,” Wagnild said in a statement Wednesday. “Mr. Myers’ only intent that day was to protect himself and others from serious harm or death.”
The Newcastle City Council had asked residents with an interest in public safety issues or a background in security to apply to join the committee, which would make recommendations to officials on how to make the community safer.
Myers, who launched his own security company of Midnight Sun Operations LLC in March 2023, was one of six the city appointed.
But city officials never encouraged committee members to take crime-fighting into their own hands, said Philipp Schmidt-Pathmann, who is on the committee.
“Absolutely not — they said that’s what the police is for,” Schmidt-Pathmann said Tuesday. “This committee doesn’t take any matters into their own hands — quite the opposite.”
Schmidt-Pathmann, a Newcastle homeowners association board member and resident of 29 years, said he joined the committee to learn from police and prosecutors and help address issues like car break-ins and package theft. The committee has met three times since April, he said, but has not yet made any recommendations to the city.
Last week’s arrest of one of his fellow committee members for second-degree murder “came as a shock,” he said.
“It’s very upsetting to me that something like this happened,” Schmidt-Pathmann said. “It doesn’t fit at all to what this (committee) is about.”
Newcastle Mayor Clark and Councilmember Steve Tallman, who chairs the committee, did not respond to inquiries Tuesday.
Former Councilmember Carol Simpson, who served in the position for more than a decade ending in 2019, said she was frustrated to see Myers’ arrest “backfiring” on the city.
“I’m very concerned that we have people being appointed to a public safety ad hoc committee who feel they can take the law into their own hands with guns,” Simpson said. “I don’t want our city to be a stand-your-ground kind of community, where people feel that they need to keep guns to protect themselves,” she said.
In arguing for setting Myers’ bail at $2 million, King County prosecutors said he has a pattern of trying to stop people he mistakenly believes are armed, despite not being a member of law enforcement.
Prosecutors pointed to a March 29, 2022, incident, when Myers called 911 to report seeing a person on a bike pointing a gun at people. Myers followed the person through multiple stores, telling police he “might have to shoot.” But when officers arrived, they determined the person was carrying what appeared to be a metal bike part, according to a court document.
After the June 5 shooting, Myers told Renton detectives he had been surveilling the parking lot to prevent crime — a practice he called “overwatch” — and felt a “duty to act” when he believed a crime was imminent, court records show.
“Only a high bail, electronic home detention, and surrender of all firearms will protect the community from an untrained civilian who believes he has a duty to shoot people who have not hurt anyone,” wrote King County Senior Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Lauren M. Burke in a Monday court filing.
Correction: A previous version of this story misstated how long Carol Simpson has lived in Newcastle. Simpson has lived in Newcastle for 25 years.
Catalina Gaitán: 206-464-8276 or [email protected]; Catalina Gaitán is a staff reporter for The Seattle Times.
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