Cops Shoot at Suicidal Man, Death Ruled to be Suicide
It is impossible to know exactly what happened to Hien Trong Luong or why cops would fire their guns at a man who was allegedly threatening to kill himself, but the story from the Gwinnett County Medical Examiner’s Office is that the death was ruled to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound.
With cops carrying drop guns on them and this being a proven practice, it’s impossible to know if Hien brought a gun with him or the cops involved are in fact lying about it, but the police story is:
“Luong knocked on the door and it was answered by the primary detective. The detective recognized the suspect and identified himself as a police officer. The detective ordered the suspect to remove his hands from his pockets, which the suspect refused to do. After a brief time, the suspect produced a handgun from his pocket, which he pointed at his own head. The suspect refused all orders from both detectives to drop the weapon. After just a few seconds, the suspect fired a single shot, striking himself in the head. The primary detective fired a single shot immediately after, which missed the suspect. Luong died at the scene.”
Police spokesman Cpl. Jake Smith said a detective fired a single shot immediately following the first shot, which missed Luong.
Smith said two GCPD detectives were at the home to talk to witnesses in a terroristic threats case when Luong reportedly pulled up in a minivan, left the vehicle running and approached the front door.
The medical examiner’s office ruled the death a suicide, Smith said, but he failed to explain why the suicidal man was fired upon.
The investigation by the Deadly Force Investigation Team — which is comprised of members from multiple GCPD units — is ongoing. Smith said GCPD does not use outside agencies to investigate officer-involved shootings.
The detective who fired the shot at Luong is on paid administrative leave, which is standard procedure.