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Corey Jones never fired his gun, was shot 3 times by police, attorney says

Benjamin Crump, an attorney for the Corey Jones family, speaks to the media Thursday in West Palm Beach, Fla.

Benjamin Crump, an attorney for the Corey Jones family, speaks to the media Thursday in West Palm Beach, Fla.

(Joe Raedle / Getty Images)
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Corey Jones, the Florida man who was shot and killed by a plainclothes police officer while he waited for a tow truck, never fired his gun before being shot by the officer three times, attorneys for his family said.

Benjamin Crump, a prominent civil rights attorney who is representing the family, said Thursday he met with Palm Beach County State Attorney Dave Aronberg and serious questions remain about the shooting.

Following a news conference, hundreds of people rallied Thursday outside Palm Beach Gardens City Hall to demand greater transparency in the investigation.

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Jones, a 31-year-old musician from Boynton Beach, Fla., was shot after he was confronted by Palm Beach Gardens Police Officer Nouman Raja, 38, on the side of a highway around 3 a.m. Sunday.

Details about the confrontation remain murky: Police have said the officer was investigating what he thought was an abandoned vehicle when he was “suddenly confronted by an armed subject.”

The officer fired his gun six times, Crump said, striking Jones three times and killing him.

A handgun was recovered outside Jones’ car, police said, and paperwork indicated Jones had bought the gun three days earlier. Officials have not said whether Jones pointed his gun at Raja or whether he fired it.

Police have said that Raja was investigating a string of burglaries in the area and was in plain clothes and driving an unmarked car. The car was not outfitted with a dashboard camera, and the department’s officers do not wear body cameras, according to Palm Beach Gardens Police Chief Stephen Stepp.

An attorney for the Jones family said Thursday that Raja did not show his badge, either.

“[The officer] rolled up on him in an unmarked white van with tinted windows,” Crump said Thursday. “[Jones] doesn’t know if he’s about to be mugged, if he’s about to be robbed, if he’s about to be killed. Imagine yourself on the side of the road at three in the morning ... the sense of concern you would have.”

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Crump also questioned why the officer felt the need to confront Jones alone and why he didn’t call for backup.

“You have to ask serious questions when a plainclothes police officer with no badge ... shoots someone,” said Daryl D. Parks, another attorney for the family. “It draws many questions.”

The Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Department has opened an independent investigation into Jones’ death, but police have released few details.

Family members also spoke Thursday at the emotional news conference, demanding answers.

“I raised my children to be respectable and to respect the law,” said Clinton Jones Sr., Corey’s father, his voice cracking between tears. “Today, I need some answers. I need to know why. Why is my son gone today?”

Corey’s sister, Melissa Jones, remembered her brother as a kind, passionate musician who loved the drums from a young age and who was protective of his sister.

“He was the person who could bring the softest part out of the hardest person,” Jones said tearfully. “Times I didn’t want to laugh, didn’t want to smile, my brother would be the one who knew what to say to me.”

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Crump, who has represented the relatives of shooting victims Trayvon Martin and Tamir Rice, criticized the police for the lack of information Jones’ family was given about his whereabouts. The family has said they were not informed about his death until the next afternoon.

Jones had just finished a show with his band when his car broke down, a bandmate told the South Florida Sun-Sentinel. Crump said he called and spoke to his brother, C.J., who offered to pick him up, but Corey declined, saying he needed to be at church to perform with the choir the next morning.

C.J. tried calling him back at 3:19 a.m., Crump said, but got no answer. He called his brother repeatedly that morning but couldn’t reach him.

“You can only imagine the wait ... until somebody knocked on his door the next afternoon to tell him his brother is gone,” Crump said. “He doesn’t understand it. His sister doesn’t understand it. His father doesn’t understand it.”

Times staff writer James Queally contributed to this report.

For more breaking news, follow me @cmaiduc

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