Protesters hold up their hands and signs on a cable bridge in Pasco on Saturday during a protest stemming from the officer-involved shooting death of Antonio Zambrano-Montes. (The Associated Press)

Protesters hold up their hands and signs on a cable bridge in Pasco on Saturday during a protest stemming from the officer-involved shooting death of Antonio Zambrano-Montes. (The Associated Press)

Capping a week of protests, bridge is blocked during demonstration over police shooting death

  • By Nicholas K. Geranios The Associated Press
  • Monday, February 23, 2015 12:01am
  • News

By Nicholas K. Geranios

The Associated Press

PASCO — The rallying cry in Ferguson, Mo., was “Hands up, don’t shoot!” In New York, it was “I can’t breathe!” In Pasco these days, the protest signs say things like “It was just a rock!!!”

In a case with unmistakable echoes of Ferguson and New York, demonstrators have gathered every day during the past week in front of City Hall to demand answers in the deadly police shooting of Antonio Zambrano-Montes, a 35-year-old Mexican immigrant and former orchard worker who authorities said was throwing rocks at officers.

On Saturday evening, protesters staged a march that shut down traffic on a bridge over the Columbia River.

The Tri-City Herald reports that more than 50 people were in the group of protesters.

Demonstrators blocked traffic along the cable bridge as they slowly marched from Pasco toward Kennewick. Many motorists yelled and honked in support.

The protesters then turned and marched back toward Pasco, blocking traffic heading north as the sun set on the Columbia River.

The marchers shouted “We will not be silenced” and “We are all Antonio.”

The Feb. 10 killing — captured on cellphone video by an onlooker — was the fourth by law enforcement officers in Pasco in less than a year.

It has sparked calls for a federal investigation and roiled this fast-growing agricultural city of 68,000, where more than half the residents are Hispanic but few are members of the police force or the power structure.

Protesters and police officials alike said they want to avoid the violence and acrimony that happened in Ferguson last year when officers shot and killed an unarmed black 18-year-old.

“We will continue to be calm, until they give us a reason not to,” said protester Hector Alamillo, 62, of Pasco.

“We are not a Ferguson. We will not burn things down.”

But Alamillo said Hispanics are “very distrustful right now” and are wondering why officers did not use non-lethal force to subdue Zambrano-Montes.

In the cellphone video, Zambrano-Montes is seen running across a busy street, pursued by three officers.

As he stops and turns around, gunshots ring out and he falls dead.

While the shooting is under investigation by a regional task force — and being watched by the FBI — police have said that Zambrano-Montes had hit two officers with rocks and had refused to put down other stones.

They also said a stun gun failed to subdue him.

The case has cast a spotlight on the ethnic makeup of working-class Pasco, an apple-, grape- and potato-growing center about 220 miles from Seattle that has more than doubled in size since 2000.

The city is more than 55 percent Hispanic; many members of the community flocked here from Mexico to work in the fields and at food-processing plants.

Starting in the 1960s and ’70s, many of those migrant workers settled down here.

Pasco’s modest downtown is now lined with Mexican restaurants, bakeries and clothing stores, and city business is conducted in English and Spanish.

The police force of 71 uniformed officers has just 15 Hispanics, and only one person on the seven-member City Council is Hispanic.

Once a hotbed of gang- and drug-related violence, the city has seen crime plummet in the past 20 years, in large part because the Hispanic community worked with police, said police Capt. Ken Roske.

But there are worries that future cooperation will be jeopardized if the investigation clears the officers.

“We are asking for more training for our officers,” said protester Lorian Reavely, 39, of Pasco, who stood in front of a sign reading “Stop Police Brutality. It was just a rock!!!”

Police said officers felt threatened by Zambrano-Montes.

He had been arrested by Pasco police early last year for assault after throwing objects at officers and trying to grab an officer’s pistol, court records show.

Police have said Zambrano-Montes was not armed with either a gun or a knife.

Whether he had a rock in his hand when he was shot is still under investigation, said Kennewick police Sgt. Ken Lattin, spokesman for the regional investigative unit.

All three officers — two whites and one Hispanic — opened fire; the number of shots has not been disclosed.

Zambrano-Montes had recently spent time in a homeless shelter after his home burned.

But investigators have been unable to interview anyone who saw him in the two weeks leading up to his death, Lattin said. Officers want to know if he had mental problems.

“His actions were not normal,” Lattin said at a news conference.

“None of you would stand out there at 10th and Lewis Street and throw rocks at cars. And when the police show up, throw rocks at them and then run.”

Investigators’ findings will be turned over to prosecutors, who will decide whether to bring charges.

The county coroner has also ordered a public inquest in hopes of calming “some of the fears and outrage of the community.”

In a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder, Felix Vargas, chairman of Consejo Latino, a local Hispanic group, said the investigation by the regional unit will have “no credibility whatsoever.”

He noted that the unit exonerated officers in three other recent fatal shootings in Pasco.

“The eyes of the world are on Pasco,” Vargas said. “We fully expect charges to be brought.”

Last month, a Pasco officer was cleared in the deadly shooting of a suspected car thief who pulled a pellet gun.

In December, an investigation concluded that a sheriff’s deputy was justified in killing an intoxicated man who fired more than 60 rounds at officers.

In November, a prosecutor cleared two Pasco officers who shot and killed a knife-wielding man.

Zambrano-Montes’ widow and two daughters have filed a $25 million claim with the city in the first step toward a lawsuit.

And a makeshift memorial to Zambrano-Montes has taken shape outside Vinny’s Bakery, a Mexican business near the spot where he was gunned down.

“The gentleman was being disruptive, but he was not violent enough to warrant guns,” said Ben Patrick, who said he witnessed the shooting. “It was wrong.”

More in News

U.S. Highway 101, pictured from the Black Diamond bridge, is set to reopen late Thursday or early Friday, the state Department of Transportation said. The section has been closed since early March for fish passage work on Tumwater Creek with a detour set up on state Highway 117. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Reopening soon

U.S. Highway 101, pictured from the Black Diamond bridge, is set to… Continue reading

Amazon submits permits with the city of Port Angeles

Project larger than one previously proposed

Port Townsend likely to see increases in recycling fees

Changes coming due to adjustments with Jefferson County Solid Waste

Logging protest continues with climber in tree

Injunction hearing scheduled for Friday

Three hospitalized after crash on Highway 19

Three people were taken to hospitals following a three-car collision… Continue reading

Colleen Williams of Port Angeles won a Toyota Corolla donated by Wilder Toyota in the 36th annual Great Olympic Peninsula Duck Derby. She said Tuesday she was shocked when Bruce Skinner, the executive director of the Olympic Medical Center Foundation, called her Sunday to tell her she won. “All I could say is, ‘You’re kidding me. What?” Williams said. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Toyota winner

Colleen Williams of Port Angeles won a Toyota Corolla donated by Wilder… Continue reading

Overnight lane closures set east of Port Angeles

Contractors working for the state Department of Transportation will… Continue reading

Kayla Fairchild, culinary manager for the Port Angeles Food Bank, chops vegetables on Friday that will go into ready-made meals for food bank patrons. (Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News)
Meal programs offer twist to food bank services

PA launches first revenue-producing effort with entrees

Jefferson County to move its fire danger

Risk level to increase to moderate June 1

Assessor’s office asks to keep reduced hours

Customer service now four days per week

Port Angeles Mayor Kate Dexter is one of several local people who helped pluck a winning duck from a pickup truck on Sunday at Port Angeles City Pier. There was 36 ducks to be plucked from six Wilder Toyotas. (Dave Logan/For Peninsula Daily News)
Duck Derby event brings in new record

Proceeds to benefit students seeking medical careers

Woman flown to hospital after rollover crash

A woman was flown to a Seattle hospital after… Continue reading