Portland police on Thursday released portions of video footage that investigators obtained showing some of Lane Christopher Martin’s actions and movement before he was fatally shot by an officer when cornered in an apartment complex on July 30.

The video images from private security cameras do not capture either the police firing of less-lethal, sponge-tipped rounds at Martin or the fatal shooting of Martin, and some of the footage doesn’t include audio.

A Multnomah County grand jury found no criminal wrongdoing by Officer Gary Doran, who fired the fatal shots, killing Martin near a stairwell of the Ash Street Courtyard Apartments in Southeast Portland. Martin’s family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the city and police, alleging police used excessive force against Martin and failed to de-escalate the encounter.

Doran, a 12-year bureau member, told a grand jury that he fired when he believed Martin was about to pull out a knife from his pants pocket when confronted by police in the courtyard of the apartment complex, though Doran never saw a blade when he started shooting.

Doran fired his 9mm handgun 11 times. Martin was hit nine times and died at the scene after wounds perforated both his lungs and heart, according to an autopsy report.

A black folding knife attached to keys was found under Martin’s body after he was shot, according to police.

Police first responded around 4:22 p.m. on a report of a man breaking into a car and the fatal shots were fired 18 minutes later, at 4:40 p.m., after police tracked Martin’s movements over a nine-block area, according to the bureau.

"The video is a compilation of private security footage that captured some, but not all, of the interaction,'' the bureau’s release said.

The video released, for example, doesn’t capture when a security guard first spotted Martin trying to break into a Jeep in the lot of an old Safeway store near the 200 block of Northeast 122nd Avenue.

When the guard approached, he saw Martin with a hatchet and a knife, according to police reports.

Martin was seen swinging the hatchet as he walked to a nearby bus stop and then south along Southeast 122nd Avenue when police arrived. Two officers fired less-lethal sponge-tipped rounds at Martin, striking him in the legs. Martin dropped the hatchet and continued along Southeast 122nd Avenue.

Police provided this information on the video footage released:

It begins near Northeast 122nd Avenue and Northeast Davis Street and Martin is dressed in dark clothing, walking southbound on the sidewalk. Martin approaches a dark-colored SUV that is facing eastbound while armed with a hatchet-like weapon. He continues southbound with multiple officers following at a distance. About the one-minute mark, a different camera angle is pictured, looking eastbound from the westbound Max platform, at East Burnside Street and 122nd Avenue. Martin comes from the north, or left side of the screen.

At the two minute, 36 second mark, a different camera angle looks northbound at the intersection of Southeast 122nd Avenue and Ash Street. In between this video segment and the prior one, two officers’ firing of two 40mm foam-tipped less-lethal rounds, striking Martin in the lower legs, wasn’t caught on camera.

Martin is next seen running southbound on 122nd Avenue, then west on Southeast Ash Street.

The next video segment, at about 3 minutes, 16 seconds, officers confront Martin at the apartment complex but there’s no audio recording complex and the shooting isn’t seen.

"The angle of the camera was not in a position to fully capture the incident,'' the bureau said in its release.

The day after Martin was killed, Martin’s mother learned of her son’s death, what would have been Martin’s 32nd birthday. Martin was involved in a work-study program at Portland State University and was studying art there, and doing maintenance work. The month before the shooting, Martin had been placed on a mental health hold at Unity Center for Behavioral Health, and was suffering from paranoia and delusions, his mother said.

Toxicology tests showed 1.2 milligrams of methamphetamine and .12 milligrams of amphetamine in Martin’s blood.. The amounts suggested Martin may have been under a meth-induced psychosis, an officer told grand jurors.

-- Maxine Bernstein

Email at mbernstein@oregonian.com

Follow on Twitter @maxoregonian

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