Public records revealed the truth about how my son was shot to death by the police

Date:


Content note: this story mentions suicidal ideation and discusses a police homicide. 

This story is published in cooperation with Sunshine Week, a nonpartisan collaboration among groups in the journalism, civic, education, government, and private sectors that shines a light on the importance of public records and open government. Sunshine Week is coordinated by the Joseph L. Brechner Freedom of Information Project at the University of Florida’s College of Journalism and Communications.

Across the nation, local governments sometimes disseminate false narratives in cases of officer-involved shootings. Local officials can craft messages that favor police because the community rarely has access to the information that would contradict that message.

If the goal is to conduct an impartial and thorough investigation, public access to information is crucial.

On January 20, 2018, the unthinkable became a reality. My oldest son, John, was home alone and posted distressing messages about suicide on social media. His friends were worried and called 911. Overland Park, Kansas police officer Clayton Jenison responded to a welfare check at our home. Jenison unholstered his weapon as he watched the garage door slowly open. John pulled the minivan out in a straight line at 2.5 mph.

Jenison yelled stop and fired the first of 11 shots into the minivan, hitting my son six times. Jenison had his firearm drawn as the garage door opened and was standing to the side of the vehicle with each shot fired. He did yell, “Stop the car,” but not so loudly that another officer’s in-car recording system picked it up a block away. It was Jenison’s own audio pack that transmitted the sound, which was then audible through their in-car systems. The van never accelerated toward an officer.

All these details matter when determining whether an officer is justified in using lethal force. Justice comes down to who has access to the evidence, documents, and unredacted video footage. It’s crucial to understand that we know what we know today because of a neighbor’s doorbell recording, not from information initially provided by the police or the Johnson County District Attorney.

That recording contradicted the narrative and was the catalyst for public outcry for additional information. What we saw on that recording started my open records journey.

Several years after we lost John, there were still missing pieces of information. I asked for the crime lab reports from district attorney Steve Howe. Howe used the Kansas Open Records Act (KORA) statute to deny my request. Under Kansas law, these records are considered criminal investigative records and are exempt from disclosure.

There was a Honda Odyssey minivan in the garage. As the door opened, the minivan backed up, toward the second officer who was standing directly behind it. The officer drew his sidearm. He shouted “STOP THE CAR” in a booming voice that was picked up by another officer’s in-car recording system a block away. The van accelerated toward the officer. The officer shot twice while moving away from the van.

Office of the Johnson County (Kansas) District Attorney, from a media fact sheet issued February 20, 2018

In a last-ditch effort to obtain this information, I put in a KORA request to the Johnson County crime lab. Within a week of my request, I received a phone call that I needed to bring $25 cash to the lab, and they would provide me with all the information on a flash drive.

The evidence on the flash drive confirmed what we had thought all along: The officer was never in any imminent danger. Additionally, it exposed that the district attorney had cleared the officer of any wrongdoing before the crime lab had even completed its work.

In January 2024, the Kansas Office of the Disciplinary Administrator dismissed my complaint against Howe for releasing a false narrative. However, the office’s review committee found that my complaint did have merit and issued a letter of caution to Howe. In March of 2018, Jenison resigned from his position, and in 2019, the City of Overland Park settled a lawsuit with me without admitting guilt.

It took years of litigation, open record requests, and a federal Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Investigation to correct the narrative in my son’s story. No family should have to endure this process just to get the facts surrounding the loss of life.

Sunshine Week and the work supported by the Brechner Freedom of Information Project and the National Freedom of Information Coalition is about more than open government and transparency. It is about ensuring the criminal justice system is serving the people it has been entrusted to help.


Albers is a mother, educator, and mental health advocate who has dedicated her life to fighting for transparency and justice following the tragic loss of her son in a Kansas police shooting. With a focus on accountability, she has uncovered hidden truths and driven policy changes in local government and law enforcement. Albers can be reached at sheila@albershcs.org 


More in COLUMNS & OPINION

Thoughtful takes from the readers and the writers.

Writer’s note: a preface to our feature story on Geneva’s youth prison

Wayward or not, children shouldn’t have to risk death to be free.


Brighter days: spring theater and arts

An issue note from a Reader culture editor


Editor’s note: a check-in

Only six weeks into 2025 and we’re already at crazy time.


Publisher’s note: why we’re here

Updates on the RICJ and Chicago Reader’s financial situation, and how you can continue to help


The myth of the migrant crime wave

A mass shooting in Chicago should have spurred conversation about gun control and preventing violence. Instead, it served as inspiration to blame Venezuelan immigrants.


Editor’s note: staying grounded, not buried

You don’t need a furry weatherman to know which way the wind blows.






Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

A Berta pick, an Arteta pick

Morning all. After a flurry of news over the...

Squid Game USA: News, Release Date, and Everything We Know

There is no current release date for the...