Skip to main contentSkip to navigation
Since the shooting, Minneapolis police have changed policy to treat witnesses in a constitutional manner.
Since the shooting, Minneapolis police have changed policy to treat witnesses in a constitutional manner. Photograph: Matt Sepic/AP
Since the shooting, Minneapolis police have changed policy to treat witnesses in a constitutional manner. Photograph: Matt Sepic/AP

Minneapolis to pay $700,000 to family of man killed by police

Chiasher Vue’s kids wanted to calm their mentally ill father, but police detained them in vehicle and killed him as he pointed a gun

The city of Minneapolis has agreed to a $700,000 settlement with family members who were locked inside two squad cars when police killed their father after officers refused their offers to try and help calm him down.

A federal judge ruled that officers were justified in shooting 52-year-old Chiasher Vue after he pointed a rifle at them on 15 December 2019. The settlement will resolve a lawsuit his family filed arguing that police had illegally and unconstitutionally detained them that night.

Chamee Vue and her brothers Hailee and Nou Vue tried to intervene but weren’t allowed out of the police cars. And after the shooting, they spent hours detained in interrogation rooms while police questioned them.

“I couldn’t get out of the car, couldn’t give him reassurance that everything would be OK,” Chamee said.

A language barrier contributed to the the killing because Chiasher Vue spoke little English and few officers there that night spoke Hmong. Hailee Vue said he wants the Hmong community to understand what happened to his family, and for their case to be instructive for future policing.

“I just don’t want any other family to go through what the four of us went through,” he said.

Since Chiasher Vue’s killing, Minneapolis police have changed department policy on handling witnesses to say they must be treated in a constitutional manner. A police spokesperson told the Minneapolis Star Tribune that the policy change wasn’t related to this case, but the Vue siblings say they still take consolation in the change. The new policy makes it more clear that a person who has not been charged with a crime and isn’t being held on probable cause is free to leave at any time.

Family members say Chiasher Vue was going through a mental health crisis and suffering with untreated depression on the night he was killed, just months before the 25 May 2020 murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police set off worldwide protests. One of the officers charged with a role in Floyd’s killing was Hmong American.

In Chiasher Vue’s case, a night of drinking and karaoke spiraled out of control when after a series of quarrels he fired several shots at a wall inside a house, and one of his sons called 911. An autopsy later determined that Chiasher Vue had a blood alcohol level of 0.20 at the time he was killed.

“Look, my dad is mentally ill,” Nou Vue said to an unidentified officer, according to squad car footage. “Just let me and my little sister go talk to him. We can talk him out.”

The officer replied: “You’re not getting out of the squad. Stop asking.”

But after Vue came out of the house pointing a rifle, he and officers quickly exchanged gunfire. Investigators weren’t able to determine who fired first, but Vue was struck by 13 bullets.

Most viewed

Most viewed