Ward suffered a ruptured testicle during the incident, which was captured by body-worn cameras affixed to Roedema and another Aurora police officer, Andrew Brown, outside his own Aurora residence in the 1600 block of South Espana Way. “He was calm and complied with all of their orders,” says attorney Igor Raykin of the Aurora-based law firm Kishinevsky & Raykin, who represents Ward. “They shot him anyway.”
The complaint was filed in March, but only recently came to light. Defendants include Roedema, Brown and the City of Aurora. “We do not have a comment on this active litigation,” says Ryan Luby, an Aurora spokesperson.
The incident took place on May 25, 2020. Here’s how Raykin summarizes what happened:
“Charles is a working electrician who simply wanted to go home after a long day at work,” he says. “His wife changed the locks on his house, so he couldn’t get in. She didn’t have a restraining order against him, and his name was on the lease. He had every right to go home.”
Ward’s wife was inside at the time with a number of their children, but a daughter was with Ward, and according to the lawsuit, “at the very least, [he] needed to gather supplies to take care of her for the night.” However, Raykin continues, “he couldn’t get in through regular means, so he tried to use one of his tools” — specifically, an electric saw called a Sawzall.
Ward’s wife responded by calling the Aurora Police Department, which dispatched Roedema and Brown. Upon encountering Ward, Brown ordered him to “get on the fucking ground now” and to drop the Sawzall; Roedema echoed these commands. According to the lawsuit, Ward responded by letting go of the tool and his cell phone before standing to adjust his shorts, which had slid down — at which point Roedema pulled the trigger.
Roedema shot Ward “within less than ninety seconds of showing up and after communicating with Charles for less than twenty seconds,” Raykin notes.
Here’s the action captured by Brown’s body-worn camera:
Five counts were initially pressed against Ward, including criminal attempt to commit second-degree burglary, possession of burglary tools, child abuse, criminal mischief and harassment. But a court later dismissed all of the charges.
In one section, the lawsuit goes beyond describing what happened to Ward, discussing the Aurora Police Department’s pattern and practice of bias against Black suspects — the focus of a consent decree issued by Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser in 2021.
“This department has a serious issue with the way that it interacts with the community, particularly the Black community,” Raykin contends. “Its history has shown this over and over again.”
He adds: “We tried to work this out with the City of Aurora before filing suit; we were ignored. They thought Charles was going to go away, but he’s seeking justice.”
Click to read Charles Ward v. City of Aurora, et al.
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