Philly cop who fatally shot 12-year-old boy to be fired; commissioner says boy shot police vehicle, ran off with gun — but wouldn't say if he had gun when he was shot



Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw said the police officer who fatally shot a 12-year-old boy last week will be fired. Outlaw also said the boy in question hit a police vehicle with gunfire and ran off with a gun before being shot — but wouldn't answer if the boy was in possession of the gun at the time he was shot.

Outlaw noted that the officer who fatally shot the boy — identified by police only as "Officer #1" due to threats the officer has received — will be suspended for 30 days with intent to dismiss, WXTF-TV reported.

The commissioner also said during Tuesday's briefing that the shooting on the evening of March 1 that killed Thomas Siderio violated the department’s use of force directive, the station said.

What's the background?

Outlaw said four officers in plain clothes were in an unmarked car as part of an investigation related to Violation of the Uniform Firearms Act. VUFA addresses illegal gun possession.

She added that the officers saw Siderio and a 17-year-old boy on the corner of 18th Street and Barbara Street and recognized one of them as wanted for VUFA questioning.

Police said the officers approached the boys and activated the vehicle's emergency lights when they heard gunfire and heard a bullet shatter the rear passenger window, WXTF said. Outlaw said the bullet tore through the front passenger seat's headrest and ended up in the vehicle's headliner.

Shattered glass injured the face and eyes of an officer in the back seat, the station added.

"The evidence collected thus far indicates that it was Thomas Siderio who discharged the firearm into the police vehicle," Outlaw said.

Outlaw added that two officers then exited the police vehicle and shot once each at Siderio, who "was still in possession of the firearm when he fled on foot."

She also said that while "Officer #2" took cover, "Officer #1" pursued Siderio on foot and shot twice at him, hitting Siderio once in his upper right back.

Police rushed Siderio to a hospital where he was pronounced dead at 7:29 p.m., Outlaw added.

Here's video of Outlaw's address to the media:

Was the boy in possession of a gun when he was shot?

WXTF said Outlaw declined to directly answer if Siderio was still armed when he was shot, citing the ongoing investigation. But the station said sources with knowledge of the investigation said video of the incident appears to show Siderio did not have a gun when he was shot.

Outlaw also said during her media address that Siderio's gun recovered from the scene — a Taurus 9mm semiautomatic handgun equipped with a laser sight and loaded with one round in the chamber and five rounds in the magazine — was in stolen status.

She added that police questioned and released the 17-year-old boy.

Anything else?

The mother of the 17-year-old who had been with Siderio told the Philadelphia Inquirer that her son told her the officers did not turn on their emergency lights or identify themselves as police before any shots were fired. She added to the paper that the boys were afraid someone in the car was about to attack them and didn’t know there were officers inside.

She also added to KYW-TV that Siderio was a troubled child who "had no chance in life" and lacked a father figure.

Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner said Monday that investigators are still speaking to witnesses and gathering information as part of its investigation, the station said, adding that Krasner said he expected "developments" in the case this week.

'Coffee, Corruption, Donuts': Cake celebrating cop's years of service uses decoration mocking police. Bakery says it was unintentional.



Tina Jones wanted to give her friend — a Philadelphia police officer — a cake to help him celebrate 25 years of service to the department, so she decided to have a local bakery decorate it for the occasion, WPVI-TV reported.

It was a pretty simple design: "Happy 25th Anniversary" written to the officer in blue atop white frosting, his badge number — and a Philadelphia police badge with the motto, "Honor, Integrity, Service," the station said.

Image source: WPVI-TV video screenshot

What happened next?

After Jones got the cake from the Bakery House in Bryn Mawr, a Philly suburb, her officer friend was about to bring it into his office to share with colleagues when Jones noticed the three words on the badge were a tad different, WPVI noted.

The badge motto instead read, "Coffee, Corruption, Donuts," the station said.

Image source: WPVI-TV video screenshot

"I wanted to cry because I'm like, 'I can't believe they did this,'" Jones later told WPVI. "That's so humiliating to put on someone's cake who is serving 25 years and in a not-so-easy job."

Image source: WPVI-TV video screenshot

What did the bakery have to say?

Sandy Stauffer, owner of the Bakery House, told the station the offending badge decoration was used by mistake.

"My decorator is beyond upset; she's been crying all weekend, we all have been because it's mortifying," Stauffer noted to WPVI. "We are not the kind of business that would ever, ever disrespect [police]. Everyone should be respected; this was not done on purpose."

Image source: WPVI-TV video screenshot

Stauffer explained to the station there were over 100 orders the decorator needed to complete, and Jones' order was near the end of the pile that day.

Image source: WPVI-TV video screenshot

But when the decorator saw the image of the badge Jones provided, the decorator thought it appeared too blurry to look good on a cake, WPVI reported. Stauffer explained to the station that the decorator then went online and found a crisper, clearer image of what appeared to be the same badge.

However, the chosen replacement image instead read, "Coffee, Corruption, Donuts."

Philly Voice called attention to the bakery's Facebook page apology posted Monday — which was not online Thursday afternoon — and the outlet said the apology indicated the decorator "did not see the fine print" on the badge.

The bakery posted an explanation Wednesday that includes more detail:

What we didn't realize was that the writing at the bottom of the badge had been altered on the Internet. Unfortunately neither the decorator nor the employee that boxed the cake noticed the alteration. On top of that the customer was shown the cake, and she didn't notice the issue with the image, either. Regrettably the cake made it to the table at the party for the officer. At some point a guest noticed the writing on the badge.

This was a horrific oversight on our part. The decorator of the cake is completely devastated. She has been with the bakery for several years, this is her career and she takes it very seriously, as everyone who works here does ... Many of our customers are members of the police force, and our staff has family members in the police and veterans of the armed forces. We respect their sacrifices and value everything they do for the community.

Stauffer added to WCAU that her staff is "tired" and has been "pushed because of the staffing situation," and it was an honest mistake.

"This bakery house respects what [police] do for their living, their job; they do a great job, and I'm sorry ... please don't ever think otherwise that we don't respect the police," she told WPVI.

Jones told WPVI the bakery offered her a full refund, but she declined: "I didn't want the money back ... I knew if I accepted the money back, it [would be] like, 'It was OK what you did,' and it wasn't."

Anything else?

According to Philly Voice, the same altered badge image was used by Philadelphia news station WCAU, which "mistakenly" ran it on the 5 p.m. news Feb. 11 for a story about city employees, including five police officers, who died from COVID-19.

The station's use of the altered badge had Commissioner Danielle Outlaw tweeting that while she accepted WCAU's apology, "mistakes such as these can tear away at our legitimacy, & can also diminish the work of our employees who risk their safety every day ..."

Police shortage: Cops retiring in droves, 'recruiting crisis,' applications 'historically low'



Following the "defund the police" movement and the "abolish the police" movement, constant negative coverage of law enforcement by the media, anti-police sentiment becoming mainstream, and the threat of riots have contributed to a police shortage across the country.

The Philadelphia Police Department currently has 268 vacancies and is expecting even more shortages in the near future.

"From Jan. 1 through Thursday, 79 Philadelphia officers have been accepted into the city's Deferred Retirement Option Program, meaning they intend to retire within four years, according to Mayor Jim Kenney's office," the Philadelphia Inquirer reported. "During the same time period last year, just 13 officers had been accepted into the program, the office said."

"It's the perfect storm. We are anticipating that the department is going to be understaffed by several hundred members, because hundreds of guys are either retiring or taking other jobs and leaving the department," Mike Neilon, spokesperson for the Philadelphia Fraternal Order of Police, told the newspaper.

Neighboring New Jersey is facing a "recruiting crisis," according to Pat Colligan, president of the New Jersey State Policemen's Benevolent Association.

Colligan said that recent notorious police-involved deaths of citizens such as George Floyd, Tamir Rice, and Breonna Taylor have impacted recruiting efforts.

"Every action has a reaction. When you vilify every police officer for every bad police officer's decision, [people] don't want to take this job anymore," Colligan, head of New Jersey's largest police union, said. "It's been a very trying and difficult time to put on the badge every day."

Colligan also said the "quality has really diminished in the last few years," which could mean more tragic police confrontations in the future.

Col. Patrick Callahan, the acting superintendent of the New Jersey State Police, said the state's largest police agency received a "historically low" number of applications this year. In some years, the New Jersey State Police would usually receive between 15,000 to 20,000 applications – this year they only received 2,023 qualified applicants as of Thursday, according to NJ.com.

"The atmosphere with police work right now is people just don't want to apply," Robert Fox, president of the New Jersey State Fraternal Order of Police, said.

The Baltimore City Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 3 said there were "recruitment and retention issues," which prompted the "topic of closing police district(s)."

"Our Patrol numbers are now below 700 officers which is about 300-400 below what is needed," the Baltimore FOP said, according to WBFF-TV. "This creates huge safety issues for our officers and for the citizens of Baltimore."

After facing a police shortage, Albany Police Chief Michael Persley said the department should offer more incentives to attract new recruits.

Officials also said that the pandemic has hurt police recruiting since new officer training was suspended.

"And you got to remember that once you go into the academy, it takes you about 10 months to finish. So, we're not looking at putting any boots on the ground until maybe next Spring," Fraternal Order of Police Lodge #5 President John McNesby told WPVI-TV.

Police shortage in Philadelphia developing into very real concern, FOP president says www.youtube.com

Report: Philadelphia PD ordered officers not to arrest rioters and looters — just disperse them — as city was ransacked



As looters and rioters ransacked the city of Philadelphia again Tuesday night in response to the deadly police shooting of Walter Wallace Jr., the city police's response was reportedly obstructed by their own deputy commissioner.

WTXF-TV reporter Steve Keeley tweeted Wednesday morning that police officers were "extremely frustrated" after Deputy Police Commissioner Melvin Singleton allegedly ordered both patrol and commanding officers to "not arrest looters just disperse them."

"By the order of CAR-2, Philadelphia Police will respond to 'priority' calls only," the alleged directive from the department obtained by Keeley said. "This means no calls for disturbance, missing person, stolen vehicle, burglary or theft will be answered."

Keeley added that some officers believe the order "leaves no deterrent to stop looting."

It was not immediately clear if and when the order became effective, as police made at least 90 arrests, most for burglary, during Monday's riots. However, Keeley's tweet seems to indicate that the order was given heading into Tuesday night.

Yesterday when police announced the number of arrests in the Mon-Tues looting,charges were for “burglary”. And in… https://t.co/EIkUUGP7Lv
— Steve Keeley (@Steve Keeley)1603890736.0

Rioters first took to the streets Monday night after video of 27-year-old Wallace's death went viral on social media. In the video, Wallace appeared to be walking toward police as they yell at him and eventually open fire. The officers said that Wallace was carrying a knife and refused to drop it as he approached them.

Philadelphia police reported that on Monday night alone at least 30 officers were injured amid the chaos and lawlessness. Videos on social media showed rioters and looters facing little resistance as they burnt property and ransacked shops.

BlazeTV's Elijah Schaffer recorded Black Lives Matter protesters chanting, "Every city, every town, burn the precincts to the ground!"

Schaffer was later attacked by a mob while recording looters inside a Philadelphia Five Below store, resulting in a bloody mouth and swollen lip.

Schaffer described the assault in a video posted on Twitter, in which he said he "was jumped by BLM rioters while they were looting more than a dozen stores, including Wal-Matt [sic], T-Mobile, & 5-below."

PHILADELPHIA: This is the footage I was recording when BLM assaulted me. Other journalists were filming but I was… https://t.co/Jz69QaFImN
— ELIJAH SCHAFFER (@ELIJAH SCHAFFER)1603853272.0