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Calif. officers who shot double amputee won't face charges, D.A. says

Libor Jany, Los Angeles Times on

Published in News & Features

LOS ANGELES — Citing insufficient evidence, the Los Angeles County district attorney's office said it would not file charges against two Huntington Park, California, police officers in the 2023 fatal shooting of Anthony Lowe, a double amputee who was trying to flee police while holding a long-bladed knife.

Prosecutors announced the decision Tuesday afternoon, releasing a report that cleared the officers involved of wrongdoing when they opened fire.

The report said the officers, Paul Munoz and Joshua Volasgis, were forced to make a split-second decision when confronted by Lowe, an armed suspect who had just stabbed someone.

"What transpired in this incident was a tragic series of events put in motion by Lowe and his dangerous and violent actions," the D.A.'s report said. "The fact the officers' actions were taken against a possibly suicidal person who was experiencing a mental break and suffered physical limitations does little to assuage the emotional response to such a tragedy."

In an accompanying video explanation, Dist. Atty. Nathan Hochman called scrutinizing the use of deadly force by police "one of the most challenging, important and sensitive responsibilities our office undertakes," but said that ultimately he did not believe prosecutors could prove charges against the officers at trial.

Attorney Christian Contreras, who filed a wrongful death lawsuit on behalf of Lowe's family, said his clients had been holding out hope that the officers would be criminally charged. He noted the D.A.'s decision to drop charges in another controversial policing killing — the 2023 shooting death of Christopher Deandre Mitchell — and questioned how serious Hochman is about holding officers accountable.

Minutes before the January 2023 shooting, prosecutors said that Lowe, 36, lunged from his wheelchair and stabbed a man in the chest in the 1900 block of Slauson Avenue. The victim, who suffered a collapsed lung and two broken ribs, was captured on a surveillance camera staggering away, while Lowe waited at the corner for a few seconds before crossing the street.

Footage released by Huntington Park police showed three officers — Munoz, Volasgis and Freddy Ramirez — arriving on the scene and approaching Lowe as he tried to wheel away. Volasgis holstered his gun and grabbed Lowe's wheelchair, dumping him onto the ground. As he tumbled to the pavement, a knife he was concealing fell and landed nearby.

Emails seeking comment from Volasgis and Munoz weren't immediately answered on Tuesday.

Lowe picked up the knife and began hobbling away on his knees as officers trained their guns at him. The video showed Lowe swinging the knife above his head at one point. Almost simultaneously Ramirez deployed his Taser, while Munoz and Volasgis opened fire with their service weapons.

After the shooting, according to the D.A.'s report, Volasgis told investigators he feared for his life and that of his police colleagues, drawing on his prior training that a knife can be thrown 10-15 feet away.

An autopsy found that Lowe was struck by eight of the 11 rounds fired. It also revealed small traces of methamphetamine in his bloodstream.

None of the officers involved had body cameras, and their police squads weren't equipped with dashboard cameras. The incident was captured in grainy detail on a security camera from a nearby medical clinic.

The wrongful death suit filed by Lowe's family — one of several legal challenges prompted by the incident — claimed he was having a mental health crisis and had been coping with the recent amputations of both of his legs.

 

Lowe was on parole after serving an 18-year state prison sentence for a series of crimes, including a "gang-related robbery," the D.A.'s office said. After moving in with an aunt in Texas, Lowe lost his legs following an incident in which he jumped off a freeway overpass while being pursued by law enforcement officers.

He eventually returned to L.A. to live with his mother; LAPD officers responded to her home at least twice in connection with mental health-related emergencies, the D.A.'s office said.

Contreras, the Lowe family's attorney, said the lawsuit over the shooting had been settled but said he was unable to go into details because the agreement hadn't been finalized.

In a statement, Huntington police Chief Cosme Lozano said the D.A.'s decision reflected "a thorough and independent evaluation of the facts, evidence, and applicable law."

"As with all officer-involved incidents, this matter was subject to an external review process, and we recognize the importance of that process in ensuring accountability and adherence to the rule of law," the statement read.

Volasgis had previously been involved in other controversial use-of-force incidents.

A former U.S. Marine, he began his career with the LAPD and was one of the officers present at the fatal shooting of Charly "Africa" Keunang in 2015.

The killing of Keunang, who was homeless, set off days of protests and prompted fierce criticism of how police deal with Skid Row residents struggling with mental illness.

Volasgis was not one of the officers who fired, but was named in a lawsuit brought by Keunang's family. The following year, Volasgis resigned from the LAPD.

LAPD officials recommended his termination after an investigation found he used excessive force when he threw a handcuffed shoplifting suspect out of the backseat of his police squad car, according to an Internal Affairs complaint reviewed by The Times.

Volasgis was fired in 2017 from the West Covina Police Department after another excessive force allegation when he punched a suspect in the head after responding to a burglary call, according to filings in a racial discrimination lawsuit he later filed against the city.

The suit alleged that he had been subjected to racial harassment by his colleagues, some of whom mocked him for being Black and addressed him in "slave-era dialect."

A message seeking comment on the suit's outcome was not immediately returned.


©2025 Los Angeles Times. Visit at latimes.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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