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Thursday, May 1, 2025

LAPD Officer-Involved Shooting Ruled Justified Despite Violations

Commission clears officer who killed mentally ill man — using LAPD’s own report

The Los Angeles Police Commission has cleared Officer Andres Lopez in the fatal shooting of Yong Yang, a mentally ill 40-year-old man — despite admitting that the officer violated procedure. In a 3–2 split decision, the Commission ruled the killing was in line with LAPD policy, relying almost entirely on a report written by LAPD itself.

Yong Yang's father speaks at LAPD officer-involved shooting meeting
Dr. Min Yang, father of Yong Yang, speaks at the LAPD Commission meeting. LAPD Chief Jim McDonnell, second from right, listens. [Sangjin Kim, The Korea Daily]

Decision rooted in LAPD’s internal justification

The ruling followed a closed-door session on April 8, where the panel reviewed the conduct of three officers involved. Two commissioners found Lopez’s actions violated department rules. The other three overruled them, accepting LAPD’s claim that the deadly force was justified.

The Commission’s only reference point was an internal LAPD report signed by Chief Jim McDonnell, which declared the officers’ actions “tactically appropriate.” The report — written and submitted by the same agency under review — has sparked serious concern over the independence and objectivity of the decision.

Admitted misconduct, no discipline

Despite agreeing that Lopez’s response included policy violations, the Commission still concluded that the fatal shot was permissible under LAPD’s guidelines. The review evaluated three criteria: tactics, weapon display, and lethal use of force — all ruled within policy.

The family of the victim disagreed sharply. Dr. Min Yang, Yong’s father, called the ruling “an incompetent judgment,” adding that the LAPD’s account was written to protect its officers, not reveal the truth. “We will pursue every legal avenue to expose what happened to my son,” he said.

Officers remain on duty with no penalties

None of the three officers involved — Lopez, Sergeant Araceli Ruvalcaba, and Officer Robert Celaya — have been suspended or disciplined. In fact, all remain on active duty.

Rachel Rodriguez, a supervisor at the Olympic Division, confirmed the officers faced no administrative action, saying only that “some roles have changed.”

Review process questioned

Kim Ki-Joon, a criminal defense attorney, said the ruling gives the officer “full legal and disciplinary cover,” effectively removing the incident as a basis for any future disciplinary action.

Police Commission spokesperson Sarah Bell defended the outcome, stating it was based on a “tactical debrief” — an internal process that checks for policy compliance. Bell confirmed the Commission has no authority to discipline and that all disciplinary power rests with Chief McDonnell — who also signed the report used to clear the officers.


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BY KYEONGJUN KIM [kim.kyeongjun1@koreadaily.com]

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Kyeongjun Kim
Kyeongjun Kim
Kyeongjun Kim covers the Korean-American community issues in the United States, focusing on the greater Los Angeles area. Kim also reports news regarding politics, food, culture, and sports. Before joining The Korea Daily, he worked at the U.S. Embassy in South Korea and the office of the member of the National Assembly (South Korea). Kim earned a BA in political science at the University of Michigan and received James B. Angell Scholars.