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Officer who shot Tamir Rice dead in Cleveland resigns from new police job in West Virginia

Officer has already resigned other police posts in Ohio and Pennsylvania

Josh Marcus
San Francisco
Monday 01 July 2024 21:00 EDT
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CCTV of Tamir Rice shooting

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Timothy Loehmann, the former Cleveland police officer who fatally shot Black 12-year-old Tamir Rice in 2014, kicking off nationwide protests, resigned from a small town West Virginia police department, according to local officials.

“As of July 1, 2024, Timothy Loehmann has resigned his position and is no longer an employee,” according to a statement to NBC News from White Sulpher Springs mayor Kathy Glover, adding that she wouldn’t comment further on a personnel matter.

The Independent has contacted Loehmann for comment.

City Council member Thomas Taylor told Cleveland.com the decision was “due to the public outcry” around the hiring of Loehmann, who shot the youth outside of a rec center in 2014 within seconds of arriving on the scene, thinking the boy’s toy gun was a real one.

Activists, including the head of Black Lives Matter Cleveland, had called attention to Loehmann’s hiring in recent days on social media.

Loehmann, who was not charged in state or federal court with any crimes, has previously resigned from positions in Ohio in 2018 and Pennsylvania under similar circumstances.

People display sigs at Cudell Commons Park in Cleveland, Ohio, November 24, 2014 during a rally for Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old boy shot by police on November 23
People display sigs at Cudell Commons Park in Cleveland, Ohio, November 24, 2014 during a rally for Tamir Rice, a 12-year-old boy shot by police on November 23 (AFP via Getty Images)

White Sulphur Springs police Chief D.S. Teubert told local media that he met Loehmann through friends from his time in the military and that he spent a year researching the officer’s background before the hiring decision was made.

“Just as a person, I looked at the whole situation,” Teubert said. “I did a background check. I researched everything. It’s just a sad situation. Does any police officer in the world stand a chance when they’re involved in a shooting? Do they deserve to never work again as a police officer, or is it just this shooting?”

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