The city of Sacramento has agreed to settle a lawsuit following the death of a knife-wielding man who turned a peaceful commute into a scene of terror.
The city agreed to pay $160,000 to the father of 44-year-old Dante Dwaine Day, who was fatally shot by police on a light rail train in August 2023 near Sacramento City College.
The deadly encounter began on the afternoon of August 15, when frantic 911 callers reported a man stalking through a Blue Line train at the Sacramento City College station, waving a “machete type of knife” that was “as long as my arm.”
Responding officers found Day sitting in a red shirt on the train, clutching a blade, alone after scaring all other passengers off. Body camera footage captured the tense standoff as officers repeatedly ordered Day not to grab the weapon.
“I’m scared of you all, bro,” Day said in the video released by the police department. “Please, please, please, sir. Please, I know you all got to do your job, but I’m scared of you all right now.”
When de-escalation failed, police tried a less-lethal approach, blasting Day with a bean bag shotgun. But instead of surrendering, the move only seemed to ignite the suspect. Video shows Day lunging toward the officers, knife in hand, prompting one cop to open fire, shooting him with lethal rounds.
Attorney John Burris filed a lawsuit against the police department on behalf of Day’s father, arguing that Day was in the throes of a mental health crisis and that the officers failed to appropriately handle the situation.
“Mr. Day’s behavior towards the officers signified that he was not of sound mind. Neither Officer Doe 1 nor Officer Doe 2 called for a crisis interventionist,” the lawsuit reportedly said.
“Officer Doe 1 and Officer Doe 2 made no attempt to de-escalate the situation in a manner that appropriately responded to Day’s state of distress.”
The lawsuit also admitted Day did in fact get on the train with a knife, but he did not threaten or harm anyone.
“Mr. Day exhibited signs of extreme mental distress. Day sat down … Officer Doe 1 and Officer Doe 2 entered the train. Mr. Day repeatedly stated that he was scared. Day begged the officers not to kill him. Mr. Day stood up,” Burris added.
“Officer Doe 1 shot Day three times with a bean bag shotgun. Mr. Day ran towards Officer Doe 1. Officer Doe 1 fired 10 bean bags at Day. Mr. Day collapsed to the floor.”
The Sacramento County District Attorney’s Office ultimately cleared the officers of any criminal wrongdoing, ruling the shooting was a lawful act of self-defense.
“Both officers reasonably feared for their safety and the safety of other officers,” the office wrote in a December 2024 letter. “Under these circumstances, the decisions to use deadly force were justified.” According to the letter, Day had been diagnosed with Schizophrenia.
Despite the legal exoneration, the city chose to settle the suit for $160,000.
Read the full article here













