HOMER, La. – For 73 years before his killing by a white police
officer, Bernard Monroe led a life in this little town as quiet as
they come — five kids with his wife of five decades, all raised in the
same house, supported by the same job.

The black man's death is making far more noise than he ever did, and
raising racial tensions between the black community and the police
department.

Rendered mute after losing his larynx to cancer, the 73-year-old
retired power company lineman was in his usual spot on a mild Friday
afternoon in February: A chair by the gate that led to his Adams
Street home. A barbecue cooker smoked beside a picnic table in the
yard as a dozen or so family members talked and played nearby.

All seemed peaceful, until two Homer police officers drove up.

In a report to state authorities, Homer police said Officer Tim Cox
and another officer they have refused to identify chased Monroe's son,
Shaun, 38, from a suspected drug deal blocks away to his father's
house.

Witnesses dispute that account, saying the younger Monroe was talking
to his sister-in-law in a truck in front of the house when the
officers pulled up.

All agree Shaun Monroe, who had an arrest record for assault and
battery but no current warrants, drove up the driveway and went into
the house. Two white police officers followed him. Within minutes, he
ran back outside, followed by an unidentified officer who Tasered him
in the front yard.

Seeing the commotion, Bernard Monroe confronted the officer. Police
said that he advanced on them with a pistol and that Cox, who was
still inside the house, shot at him through a screen door.

Monroe fell dead along a walkway. How many shots were fired isn't
clear; the coroner has refused to release an autopsy report, citing
the active investigation.

Police said Monroe was shot after he pointed a gun at them, though no
one claims Monroe fired shots. Friends and family said he was holding
a bottle of sports water. They accuse police of planting a gun he
owned next to his body.

"Mr. Ben didn't have a gun," said 32-year-old neighbor Marcus Frazier,
who was there that day. "I saw that other officer pick up the gun from
out of a chair on the porch and put it by him." -
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090410/ap_on_re_us/homer_police_shooting
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