ej bradford

He never saw EJ again.

He would eventually learn that his son, a member of the U.S. Army who had a gun permit, was attempting to help victims during a mall shooting when Hoover Police officer David Alexander shot and killed EJ instead of the actual shooter.

In February 2019, the Alabama Attorney General’s Office ruled the officer’s actions were justified.

“After an extensive investigation and review, the Attorney General has determined Officer 1 did not commit a crime under Alabama law when he shot and killed E.J. Bradford and thus the Alabama Rules of Professional Conduct preclude presentation of this case to a grand jury,” theattorney general’s report states.

“I want this to be perfectly clear: murder is murder,” Emantic said. “You don’t shoot anybody in the back moving away.”

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“I saw my son take his last breath,” Emantic recalls. “They pushed away somebody trying to render our son medical attention. They didn’t cover him up. They just left him there.”

Last year, EJ’s mother, April Pipkins, and civil rights attorneys Ben Crump and Devon Jacob filed a lawsuit against the city of Hoover and Riverchase Galleria Mall, where the shooting occurred.

Emantic wants accountability for what happened that day.

“We had to bury our son,” he says. “Justice will be when [the officer] is locked up.”

Pipkins says support from the community, and hope, continues to motivate her through her grief.

“I believe justice will come. I really believe it. I have to,” Pipkins says. “With justice coming for our son, maybe other families won’t have to suffer this pain that we’re suffering.”

To read more about EJ Bradford’s case and other cases of deadly force, pick up this week’s issue of PEOPLE on newsstands now.

source: people.com