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Police Bunde Cam Video published by fatal Christmas day shooting with wife with Hatchet

Juneau, Alaska (Ktuu)-Officer Body-Body-Camera video with the last moments of a Christmas policies, in which a 30-year-old woman in Juneau left dead, was released on Thursday.

Content warning: This article contains details and videos that some readers may feel worrying.

The investigation of the Ministry of Legal Ministry of Alaska – Office for Special Problem – found that the official Jonah Hennings – Booth was legally justified to apply fatal violence.

The shootout occurred in the early morning hours of December 25, 2024 in the parking lot of the Valley Breeze-in Convenience Store.

The police say that Hennings-Booth shot Ashley Rae Johnston after not paying attention to the commands to drop a hatchet that she held. Johnston was reported by a caller shortly before 5:30 a.m., who said she shouted at the people and threatened the caller – a private security guard – with a hammer.

As soon as the officials arrived on site, the video shows that about 48 seconds after the time of Hennings-Both emerged from his patrol car and Johnston ordered to fall or stop, a warning that he repeats at least 17 times.

At the same time, Johnston answered “Shoot” at least six times.

One of the officers used a taser who hit Johnston but not works as intended. According to Krag Campbell, deputy chief of police in Juneau, one of the barns of the taser had no contact with Johnston's body and instead struck a lighter that carried it in a necklace, which caused the fire on her chest in the film material.

The Juneau police authority publishes body material from fatal Christmas day officers

Campbell said Hennings-Booth had been in the department for almost six years. After an investigation, the office for special persecution of Hennings-Booth was justified by violence.

It was the second fatal police that was shot in Alaska's capital in 2024. Last summer, the state solved a JPD officer and Alaska Wildlife Trooper at the fatal shootout of 35-year-old Steven Kissack, a homeless person who was known to Juneau residents when the prosecutors were known to fall to fall a knife when he ran into civil servants.

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