Texas teen who was shot by police back home after nearly two months in hospital

270
2
Texas teen who was shot by police back home after nearly two months in hospital

Erik Cantu, a 17-year-old boy who was shot by a San Antonio police officer in the parking lot of McDonald's, is back home after spending nearly two months in the hospital, his family announced.

Cantu was placed on life support after the Oct. 2 shooting, in which he was shot multiple times by Officer James Brennand, and was fighting for his life in the subsequent weeks, his attorney, Brian Powers, previously said.

Cantu s parents issued a statement on Wednesday, saying he was released from the hospital just in time for the Thanksgiving holiday.

Our prayers have been answered, and we are incredibly grateful that our son Erik is home with us. They said Erik still has a long road to recovery ahead of him, but they are overjoyed at his progress in the past two weeks.

It means the world to us that we can spend Thanksgiving as a family outside of the hospital walls, where we have lived since Erik was seriously injured, the statement continued. We are thankful for many blessings this week - Erik's strength, everyone who supported us through Erik's hospitalization, and the grace of God. On October 2, Cantu was sitting in a maroon vehicle in the parking lot of McDonald's when Brennand, who was present on an unrelated disturbance call, opened the driver's door and ordered him to get out, police said.

Police body camera footage showed Cantu eating a hamburger and a 17-year-old girl in the passenger seat.

He put the car in reverse with the driver's door still open and backed up. Alyssa Campos, the police department's training commander, said in a video statement that the door hit Brennand.

The video showed that Brennand opened fire five times as the car reversed. He fired five more shots as Cantu drove away. Cantu was found a block away with multiple gunshot wounds and was hospitalized, police said.

Police said that Brennand approached Cantu's car because he believed it had evaded him the day before when he tried to conduct a traffic stop. Campos said Brennand thought the car was stolen, a claim that the family denies.

Brennand had been on the force for seven months and was still on probation, a normal practice for San Antonio officers who graduated from the police academy less than a year ago.

He was fired after the shooting, then arrested and charged with two counts of aggravated assault on October 11. He posted bond and was released.