23 April 2021

Here in Mesa: The Brutal Killing of Daniel Shaver...His Widow Laney Sweet is Going Social on Tik Tok

That lawsuit remains underway, Sweet said in a video posted on her TikTok page. She's started using the popular video app to raise awareness about her late husband's shooting.
Since joining the app a few days ago, Sweet has amassed almost 10,000 followers and more than 130,000 likes on her videos.
It's about time to go back into all delays in justice for another officer-involved use of excessive force in the case of Phillip Brailsford.
Laney Sweet is the wife of a then-26-year-old man who had fallen on the floor and begged for his life, before he was fatally shot by Arizona cop Philip Brailsford. The shooting happened in the hallway of a La Quinta Inn & Suites hotel in Mesa, Arizona, five years ago in 2016. . .
IN THE NEWS Daniel Shaver's Widow Is Using TikTok to Fight for Police Reform

Widow of Daniel Shaver demands police reform and accountability in viral TikTok video

'Can someone please tell me how is it possible... that these police officers keep getting away with murder?'

Apr 21, 2021, 12:24 pm* 
*First Published: Apr 20, 2021, 12:30 pm                 

IRL

Kahron Spearman

> Brailsford was reinstated to the Mesa Police Department in August 2018 in what AZCentral.com reported as a “procedural” manner, in an “unfunded budge position with no pay or duties.” He was given a retirement on medical grounds with a $2,569.21 monthly tax-free pension for life. His lawyer claimed Brailsford, then 28, had post-traumatic stress disorder resulting from his shooting of Shaver and the subsequent criminal trial.
> In a subsequent video, Sweet isn’t buying the idea of Brailsford’s PTSD, for a few reasons. Mesa officer charged with murder keeps his job for now | | azfamily.comAZCentral.com also found, as she explains, that Brailsford and his wife filed for bankruptcy, which essentially ended whatever claims Shaver’s family had stemming from the lawsuit against Brailsford.

She claims that the city paid for the bankruptcy and that in the filing, “he requested to keep the gun he used to murder [Daniel Shaver].”

Police Officer Charged in Daniel Shaver Murder - Attorney Marc J. Victor  and Widow Laney Sweet - YouTube“Tell me, if you have PTSD from shooting and killing somebody, do you want to keep that weapon? Do you fight to keep that?”

>

More from Newsweek 4 days ago:

Daniel Shaver's Widow Uses TikTok to Fight for Justice Over Police Shooting

The widow of Daniel Shaver, an unarmed man who was shot and killed by a police officer, is using TikTok to fight for justice.

Shaver, 26, was shot by former Mesa police officer Philip "Mitch" Brailsford five times in January 2016 after officers responded to a report of someone pointing a rifle out of hotel room window.

Shaver, a white man from Granbury, Texas, did have a pellet gun in his room, which he used for his work in pest control, but he was unarmed when he was shot dead in the hallway of the La Quinta Inn & Suites. Witnesses told police that Shaver had been showing off the pellet gun to two guests he had met earlier in the night.

Brailsford was fired from the Mesa Police Department for violating departmental policy. He was charged with second-degree murder, but acquitted after a trial in late 2017.

It was only after the acquittal that authorities released body camera footage of the shooting, showing Shaver tearfully pleading with officers not to shoot him as officers barked orders and berated him repeatedly.

In January that year, Shaver's widow Laney Sweet filed a civil lawsuit against the city of Mesa, the officers who responded to the call and the parent company of the hotel involved, alleging Shaver did nothing during the encounter that justified deadly force. She is seeking $75 million in damages, The Associated Press reported at the time.

That lawsuit remains underway, Sweet said in a video posted on her TikTok page. She's started using the popular video app to raise awareness about her late husband's shooting. Since joining the app a few days ago, Sweet has amassed almost 10,000 followers and more than 130,000 likes on her videos

"For those of you fighting for police accountability and justice, research Daniel Shaver. Daniel was my husband. He was shot and killed five years ago," she said in one video.

In another clip, she detailed how Shaver had begged for his life before he was shot multiple times.

"Can someone please help explain to me how is it possible in the United States of America that these police officers keep getting away with murder?" Sweet said. "My husband Daniel Shaver was shot and killed five years ago while crying on the ground pleading for his life saying, 'Please don't shoot me.' He was compliant. He was unarmed. He didn't even have shoes on."

In another video, Sweet referred to the spate of police killings in the U.S., such as the death of George Floyd.

"People, it's time to wake up," she said. "Even when you comply and you try and you beg for your life and you say 'please don't shoot me' and you tell them that you can't breathe and you cry and you plead and you beg... they don't care.

"Because some cops are just out looking to kill people and they get away with it. And it keeps happening. And it's going to keep happening until people wake up and demand change."

In her videos, Sweet also spoke about how Brailsford, the officer who fatally shot Shaver, would get a pension for the rest of his life, while she and her children are struggling financially.

According to reports, Brailsford signed an agreement in 2018 to be rehired by the Mesa Police Department temporarily so he could apply for accidental disability pension and medical retirement due to a PTSD diagnosis. The PTSD stemmed from the shooting of Shaver and the resulting prosecution, an attorney for the officer told ABC15 in 2018.

"He was charged with second-degree murder, acquitted and then reinstated so he could get PTSD benefits for claiming disability for murdering my husband," she said in one video. "He's collecting a pension for the rest of his life. Meanwhile, my daughters and I are losing our housing and don't know where we're going to move next month and we don't have a working vehicle. Tell me how this is justice."

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