| NEWS | Wrongful Death? The family of a man gunned down and killed by Phoenix police calls for justice. BY KATYA SCHWENK Friends, family, and community members gathered to pay their respects to Ali Osman, a man who was shot and killed days earlier by Phoenix police. In the days since police officers killed A Osman, a 34-year-old Black Muslim man, his family has been calling for justice and transparency. After the funeral procession, they rallied outside the mosque to demand that police release more details about what happened, including body camera footage from officers at the incident. “The disregard that this family has been shown by this police department is beyond the pale,” said Quacy Smith, the family’s attorney. The services for Osman, a Somali refugee who had lived in Arizona since he was a teenager, showed how deeply his death has touched Somali and Muslim residents in the Valley. “The Somali community and the Muslim community at large have wrapped their arms around this family,” Smith said. After the services, the mosque’s imam, Omar Tawil, and Azza Abuseif, executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations of Arizona, called for justice for Osman. ‘These Aren’t Boulders’ Phoenix police officers killed Osman on September 24 after the law enforcement agency said he threw rocks at their patrol cars. The Phoenix Police Department has provided little information about the circumstances that led to his death. The agency had not released body cam footage from the incident by presstime. According to police, officers encoun- tered Osman at the intersection of 19th Avenue and Tuckey Lane in northwest Phoenix at around 6:45 p.m. on September 24. He allegedly threw rocks at two patrol cars as they drove past him. Officers stopped to discuss the incident, and then returned to the intersection. Osman continued throwing rocks, which spurred officers to fire, police said. Osman did not have any other weapons, at least according to information that has been released so far by police. Witness video taken moments before the shooting shows three patrol cars gathered at the scene while a bystander begs to intervene to “de-escalate” the situation. Police shot Osman at least three times in 14 Muktar Sheikh Ali Osman was spiritual and involved in his community, despite his mental health struggles, those who knew him said. the neck, according to a preliminary autopsy conducted by the family’s legal team, Smith said during a press conference on September 29. He cautioned that the fami- ly’s investigation, which includes a private investigator, was still in its early stages. At the press conference, Smith held up two bags of rocks that were collected from the scene of the shooting. Osman was standing near a small strip of gravel along 19th Avenue, according to video from witnesses. Most of the rocks in that area are about an inch long. “Ninety-nine percent of all the rocks of the scene, this is the size,” Smith told the press. “These aren’t boulders.” Family Demands Answers Phoenix police have not released details about the rocks Osman allegedly threw at officers. “As always, the city of Phoenix Police Department is committed to our transparency policy and all body-worn cameras will be released within 14 days of the incident,” Sgt. Brian Bower, a spokes- person for Phoenix police, told New Times. The department typically releases a substantially edited video, with narration from police officers, instead of the raw footage in such incidents. Smith called the lack of information about the shooting an “embarrassment” and said police should provide unedited footage from the shooting immediately to the family. “Mr. Osman’s family and I believe that that policy falls short of crowd of hundreds of people assembled at the Islamic Community Center of Tempe, heads bowed in prayer, on September 30. >> p 18 OCT 13TH–OCT 19TH, 2022 PHOENIX NEW TIMES | MUSIC | CAFE | FILM | CULTURE | NIGHT+DAY | FEATURE | NEWS | OPINION | FEEDBACK | CONTENTS | phoenixnewtimes.com