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<div class="posted"><text id="txt_posted">This caught my eye. 120 rounds
shot at unarmed suspect who survives with minor wounds. Cop wounded by friendly
file. Good morning America!<br>
<br>
joanna<br>
__________________________________________________________________<br>
POSTED:</text>8:04 am PDT May 10,                                                                                  2005<br>
<br>
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<!--startindex--><b class="Dateline">LOS ANGELES -- </b>Authorities promised
a full investigation Tuesday into why deputies riddled a sport utility vehicle
and a Compton neighborhood with 120 bullets after the driver led them on
a chase, wounding an unarmed driver and possibly striking a deputy. "The
question is: Did they have to fire as many rounds as they did?" Los Angeles
County Sheriff Lee Baca told NBC's "Today" show.<br>
<br>
The driver, identified as 44-year-old Winston Hayes, had four gunshot wounds
and was hospitalized in stable condition Tuesday morning, the Sheriff's Department
said. A deputy was knocked down and bruised when a bullet struck his protective
vest during Monday's confrontation. His identity was not immediately released.
"We're not sure how the deputy was injured but it could be from friendly
fire," Baca said Monday. The sheriff told "Today" that the deputies fired
120 rounds.At a news conference on Monday morning, Baca said it was an intense
situation for the deputies."From where the shooters were standing, there
was an intensity environment that, quite frankly, was not easy to perceive
(on the video)," Baca said. "Deputies may shoot in defense of their lives
or the lives of citizenry." Deputies had received a shots-fired call early
Monday in a neighborhood of Compton where there has been a rise in gang-related
shootings. A white SUV had been identified as being involved, Baca said.
When deputies tried to stop Hayes' white Chevrolet Tahoe, he led them on
a 12-minute chase at speeds of up to 35 mph, Baca said. Patrol cars tried
to box in the SUV, but it drove onto a lawn and then backed into the street
toward three deputies, authorities said. An amateur videotape captured
10 deputies unleashing a fusillade against the unmoving SUV. The vehicle
then rolled slowly forward and struck the back of a patrol car. Trina Hays,
42, said she threw herself onto her lawn when the shooting erupted 20 feet
away. "This is crazy, really, really crazy," she told the Los Angeles Times.
"They didn't have any concern for anybody's life, including their own. That's
why their own police officer got hit." Bullets smashed through windows
and hit the walls of at least five homes, the newspaper said. No weapon
was found in Hayes' vehicle but a dozen shell casings were found near the
spot where the chase began, Baca said. Hayes was expected to be booked
for investigation of assault with a deadly weapon on a peace officer. The
sheriff said the shooting would be investigated by the department and the
county district attorney's office. Investigators will try to determine whether
some deputies opened fire because they mistook a colleague's friendly fire
for an attacker's. Hayes told deputies that he had used crack cocaine and
had driven around the neighborhood for hours before deputies tried to stop
him, Baca said.
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