Authorities in the southern US state of North Carolina said Monday
they are investigating the death of a deaf man who was fatally shot
after a trooper tried to pull him over for speeding.
Daniel
Harris, 29, who used sign language to communicate, led trooper Jermaine
Saunders on an eight-mile (13-kilometer) chase on Thursday that started
on an interstate highway and ended outside his home in Charlotte, local
television station WSOC reported.
The driver exited his vehicle in
the neighborhood and an “encounter took place” that led to a shot being
fired, North Carolina State Highway Patrol spokesman Sergeant Michael
Baker said in a statement.
The driver died at the scene, Baker said. No weapon was recovered from Harris, the State Bureau of Investigation told WSOC.
Saunders
has been placed on administrative leave while investigators review
evidence, including dashboard and body camera videos.
A neighbor called the shooting “totally unacceptable.”
“He
didn’t even hear the siren, he didn’t hear anything… You’re pulling
someone over who is deaf, they are handicapped,” Mark Barringer told
WSOC.
Harris’s family has launched an online fundraiser to pay for funeral expenses.
Leftover
money “will be used to set up a foundation in his name to educate and
provide law enforcement proper training on how to confront Deaf people,”
the family’s YouCaring.com fundraising page said.
They hoped to
change drivers’ registration systems so that a “deaf” alert will show up
when police look up a car’s license plate.
“With this change, Daniel will be a hero in our deaf community,” the family said.
More than $10,000 had been raised by late Monday.
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