Body-worn camera footage from the incident shows Wallace emerging from his family’s home with a knife in his hand and walking slowly toward the officers.
“No! No! No! He’s mental!” a woman is heard screaming.
After changing directions at several points, Wallace can be seen walking toward one officer and then another. His mother and an unidentified bystander tries to get control of him, but neither are successful.
“At no time did Wallace raise his knife, or make any threatening moves or actions that could be perceived as a threat to Defendant Officers, or any other individual on the scene. In fact, Wallace’s actions clearly show that of a mentally sick individual as he appears walking around in a mentally disturbed manner,” wrote Johnson.
At 3:48 p.m., less than a minute after arriving on scene, one of the officers directed his partner to “shoot him,” according to the suit.
Less than six seconds later, Matarazzo and Munz opened fire.
Wallace was “incapacitated” after the first gunshot, the complaint said. However, the officers continued to fire at him “in a manner that was excessive, unnecessary and constituted an assault and battery.”
The lawsuit seeks compensatory and punitive damages, but does not cite a specific monetary figure. It alleges wrongful death, assault and battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress.