Parents of girl killed by stray police bullet in Los Angeles call for justice

Bodycam footage shows moments before Valentina Orellana-Peralta fatally shot by LA police

Soledad Peralta and Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas, parents of 14-year-old Valentina Orellana-Peralta, who was killed by a stray police bullet last week while shopping at a clothing store, at  a press conference outside Los Angeles Police Department headquarters in Los Angeles, California, on Tuesday. Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty
Soledad Peralta and Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas, parents of 14-year-old Valentina Orellana-Peralta, who was killed by a stray police bullet last week while shopping at a clothing store, at a press conference outside Los Angeles Police Department headquarters in Los Angeles, California, on Tuesday. Photograph: Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty

The parents of a girl killed in a clothing store dressing room by a Los Angeles police officer’s stray bullet last week called for justice on Tuesday, the day after police released video showing the chaotic moments leading to the fatal shooting.

The 14-year-old girl, Valentina Orellana-Peralta, was inadvertently shot dead in a North Hollywood store on December 23rd when a police officer opened fire on a man who was bludgeoning another shopper after accosting and menacing several others.

The suspect was killed. Police said one round from the officer’s rifle apparently pierced the wall of a fitting room where the girl was hiding out of sight with her mother, striking the teenager in the chest. The girl, who had been shopping for a dress, died instantly in her mother’s arms.

"It is like my whole heart has been ripped out of my body," her father, Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas, said in a statement read by the family's attorney, Ben Crump, during a news conference outside of Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) headquarters. "We want justice for our daughter. Valentina's life mattered."

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The parents wept as they stood next to a wreath with flowers and photographs of their Chilean-born daughter. They wore signs around their necks that read “justice for my daughter” written in both English and Spanish.

Flowers and balloons at a makeshift memorial for Valentina Orellana-Peralta in North Hollywood, California, on Monday. Photograph: AFP via Getty Images
Flowers and balloons at a makeshift memorial for Valentina Orellana-Peralta in North Hollywood, California, on Monday. Photograph: AFP via Getty Images

The parents and their lawyers did not specify how they would like justice to be served.

The parents described their daughter as an exceptional student who aspired to become an engineer.

"She had great dreams of becoming an American citizen. She wanted to be here in the United States because this was the land of opportunity," Mr Crump said.

Ms Orellana-Peralta was born and raised in Chile’s capital, Santiago, and came to the United States six months ago with her mother to visit an older sister, the Los Angeles Times reported. Her mother had been working on documentation to stay in the United States with her daughter permanently.

Police chief Michel Moore issued a statement promising a "thorough, complete and transparent" investigation. The California attorney general's office also has opened an independent inquiry.

Store security video released on Monday showed the suspect’s erratic, threatening behaviour after he entered the store with his bicycle, and the pandemonium that ensued as he began attacking customers with a heavy, metal cable lock.

An undated handout photo courtesy of the family of Valentina Orellana-Peralta. The 14-year-old was in a changing room when she was hit by a bullet fired by an LAPD officer. Photograph: Family of Valentina Orellana/AFP/Getty
An undated handout photo courtesy of the family of Valentina Orellana-Peralta. The 14-year-old was in a changing room when she was hit by a bullet fired by an LAPD officer. Photograph: Family of Valentina Orellana/AFP/Getty

Police also released recordings of 911 emergency calls from store employees and others reporting an armed suspect assaulting customers, triggering an evacuation.

Audio-video footage from several officers’ body-worn cameras showed the final, violent moments of the incident as police arrive on the scene with guns drawn and close in on the suspect, who was bludgeoning a woman.

The policeman nearest the suspect can be heard shouting, “She’s bleeding, she’s bleeding,” just before he rounds a corner and confronts the assailant, as the woman tries to crawl away.

The suspect, holding the bike lock and another large object in his hands, is seen standing with his back to the outside of the fitting room, several steps from the bleeding victim as the officer raises his rifle and fires three shots at him.

The man, identified as Daniel Elena-Lopez (24), died at the scene. The Los Angeles Times has reported he had several prior felony convictions.

The 14-year-old girl was found shot to death shortly afterward in the dressing room as police searched the store for any additional victims, police said. The woman beaten with the cable lock was taken to a local hospital and survived.

The officer who fired the shots has been placed on administrative leave pending the investigation, police said. – Reuters