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Police officer who killed Tamir Rice leaves new job in West Virginia

A former Cleveland police officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice in 2014 has retired from the West Virginia police force

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – The former Cleveland police officer who shot and killed 12-year-old Tamir Rice in 2014 has resigned from the West Virginia police force, marking the third time in six years he has left a small department amid heated backlash shortly after being hired.

White Sulphur Springs city officials said Timothy Loehmann resigned from his position as a probationary officer Monday afternoon.

In a statement to WVVA-TV, Mayor Kathy Glover said Loehmann was hired on the recommendation of White Sulphur Springs Police Chief DS Teubert.

“Because this is an employment matter, I will not comment further,” Glover said.

It was not immediately clear how long Loehmann had been on the force. A call to Teubert’s office went unanswered. The Associated Press left phone messages Tuesday for Glover and Subodh Chandra, a Cleveland-based lawyer for Rice’s family. A phone number for Loehmann could not be found, and an attorney who previously represented him could not immediately be reached for comment.

After being hired in West Virginia, Chandra told Cleveland station WEWS-TV last week that Loehmann “should never be trusted with a badge and a gun.”

White Sulphur Springs is home to the upscale Greenbrier Resort in southeastern West Virginia on the Virginia border, owned by Republican Governor Jim Justice.

Rice, who was black, was playing with a pellet gun outside a Cleveland recreation center on Nov. 22, 2014, when he was shot by Loehmann, seconds after Loehmann and his partner arrived. The white officers told investigators that Loehmann yelled at Tamir three times to put his hands up.

The shooting sparked public protests against police treatment of black people, especially after a grand jury decided not to bring charges against Loehmann or his partner.

Cleveland reached a $6 million settlement with the city over Tamir’s death and eventually fired Loehmann for lying on his application for a police officer job.

Loehmann later received a part-time police job in the southeastern Ohio village of Bellaire in October 2018, but withdrew his application a few days later after Tamir’s mother, Samaria, and others criticized the hiring.

In July 2022, he was sworn in as the only police officer in Tioga – a community of about 600 residents in rural northern Pennsylvania, about 300 miles from Cleveland – but left the community without working a single shift amid fierce backlash and media coverage of his hiring.