



Christina Lais, who lives across the street from where

, was smoking a cigarette and talking with her father when she first heard sirens.

Lais told her father, who was opening an early Father's Day gift, that she had to hang up, then began recording the incident using her iPhone. The Oregonian obtained exclusive raw footage of the incident. Above is the video, which contains violent content and some graphic language; here is Lais' account:

Lais watched as a patrol car pulled over a sedan about 6:20 p.m. less than 50 feet away from where her home sits at the northeast corner of Northeast Halsey Street and Sixth Avenue. An officer got out of the car and told the driver to "put his hands on his head," she said.

Two more unmarked police cars pulled up and boxed the sedan in. Four officers approached it from all sides with Tasers at the ready, she said.

"There's some arguing, and they tase him and then he's shouting back something, and there's a lot of shouting back and forth," she said. "Then I hear one or two gunshots, and then there was just a whole slew of shots."

Lais ducked below a windowsill, then propped her cell phone on a wall and continued to film.

When the shooting stopped, the man "was now halfway out of the car, just kind of slumped into the gutter." Lais could see his gray hoodie.

"The officers shot two bean bags at him, and they were asking him to do something like show his hands. He was totally motionless. He wasn't moving at all," she said. "After some time the officers came up to him and, I guess, assessed that he didn't have the gun anymore, so they picked him up by his clothing and plopped him down on the sidewalk."

Lais, who hails from Torrance, Calif., has lived at the old house in the middle of newer construction in the Lloyd District for about two years. She said she was confused when the man didn't immediately receive medical attention.

"I didn't understand," she said. "They just kind of left him there. After some time the paramedics arrived and checked his vitals, and you could see all the police officers kind of look at each other and shrug. That's when I knew that he was dead."

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