A Council Member’s Plea: ‘This could be my son. This is the Black experience in America.’
By Paul Krueger
Before the City Council on Tuesday, Dec. 9, approved a $30 million settlement to the family of a teen fatally shot by a San Diego Police officer, Councilmembers Henry Foster III and Sean Elo-Rivera offered their perspective on the shooting and the payment.
The preventable death of 16 year-old Konoa Wilson and subsequent lawsuit against the city and officer Daniel Gold has drawn national attention, including a New York Times story that highlighted the $30 million settlement as one of the largest — if not the largest — payout to date by a local government for a wrongful death caused by law enforcement negligence or abuse.
But there have been no organized, public demands for answers about how and why the January 28th shooting happened, what discipline — if any — was imposed by SDPD on Officer Gold, and what changes — if any — have been made in officer training as a result of that fatal interaction.
Konoa Wilson was half-black, and Council Member Foster — who is the city’s only black council member — spent considerable time addressing issues of race and the minority community’s history of mistrust and strained relations with law enforcement.
But Foster’s deeply emotional statements were highly personal.

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