No charges for WI officers in shooting of armed man, attempted cop killer
11 officers shot at and killed Hunter Hanson following a January standoff in southeastern WI
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Nearly a dozen Wisconsin law enforcement officers who opened fire on an armed man wanted for allegedly trying to run over a police officer won't face criminal charges, a prosecutor announced Thursday.
Hunter Hanson, 25, was shot three times and died after 11 officers from different agencies opened fire on him following a standoff in a farm field in January. Racine County District Attorney Patricia Hanson wrote in a report that Hunter Hanson twice raised a handgun toward the officers.
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She said that the officers did their best to talk Hunter Hanson into surrendering and gave first aid after he was shot.
"If the officers were just there to take a life, I would have expected a different response," the district attorney wrote.
Hunter Hanson was charged in 2019 with attempted first-degree intentional homicide. Prosecutors alleged that in December 2018, he walked into an auto parts store, threatened the manager and tried to use his vehicle to hit a responding police officer as he drove away, the Racine Journal-Times newspaper reported in January.
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In December 2022, he was on bail awaiting trial when he fled from a traffic stop and removed his GPS ankle monitor, according to the district attorney’s report. A U.S. marshal spotted him driving on Jan. 16, leading to a high-speed chase.
Hunter Hanson eventually crashed his pickup into a creek and tried to flee across a Kenosha County field but officers closed in and a standoff followed, according to the report. The standoff went on for about 1.5 hours as he held a handgun. He grew increasingly agitated and twice raised the gun toward officers, a Racine County Sheriff's sergeant told investigators. The second time he raised the gun toward them, they opened fire.
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The Associated Press attempted to reach Mark Richards, Hunter Hanson's attorney in the attempted homicide case, via email and phone.