The police officer who shot Patrick Lyoya has been recognized as Christopher Schurr.

Lyoya, a 26-year-old Black man, was unarmed and face down on the bottom when he was shot at the back of the top moments after a visitors cease in Grand Rapids, Michigan, on April 4.

Video of the confrontation sparked fury and protests when it was launched earlier this month. The footage confirmed the white officer on high of Lyoya, an immigrant from Congo, and he might be heard shouting at him to take his hand off the officer's taser.

An post-mortem discovered he died of a single gunshot wound to the again of the top.

Video evidence of Patrick Lyoya shooting
A TV show reveals video proof of a Grand Rapids police officer battling and taking pictures Patrick Lyoya at Grand Rapids Metropolis Corridor on Wednesday, April 13, 2022.Grand Rapids Police Division by way of AP

Schurr's identify had been circulating since his face was seen in movies of the encounter, however his id wasn't confirmed till Grand Rapids Police Chief Eric Winstrom reversed course and confirmed it on Monday. Lyoya's household, attorneys and activists had been calling for the officer's identify to be launched.

In a press release, Winstrom stated he was appearing "within the curiosity of transparency, to scale back ongoing hypothesis, and to keep away from any additional confusion."

Nonetheless, no particulars about Schurr's service with the Grand Rapids Police Division had been launched.

Schurr stays on "administrative depart, stripped of his police powers till the conclusion of the Michigan State Police investigation into potential legal prices and the completion of GRPD's Inside Affairs investigation to find out whether or not all relevant departmental insurance policies had been adopted," Winstrom stated.

Schurr, 31, was one of many officers assigned to patrol the east service space in Grand Rapids, in line with town's web site. He has been with the police division for seven years, The Related Press reported.

He grew up in Byron Middle, Michigan, and joined the police in 2015 after graduating from Siena Heights College in Adrian, Michigan.

He was a high pole vaulter, and set a faculty and convention file with a vault clearing 17 ft, 1 and three quarter inches on the Wolverine-Hoosier Athletic Convention Championships in 2014, in line with MLive.

Schurr advised MLive that he was planning to marry his highschool sweetheart throughout a missionary journey to Africa that yr.

He defined that he could not afford a marriage in addition to the journey to Kisi, Kenya, to construct properties for Corinth Reformed Church in Byron Middle, so he and his fiancée had determined to marry there.

"Me and my fiancée (Brandey Bruin) went to Kenya on a missions journey final yr," he stated. "We had been requested to go once more this yr, however we could not afford a marriage and the journey, so we determined to mix them."

Schurr stated in addition they deliberate to put on conventional African outfits at their wedding ceremony.

"We will do a marriage their model. I've an African outfit already and my fiancée will pick some cloth and she or he'll make a Kenyan-style gown," he stated.

Lyoya's household needs Schurr to be fired and charged.

Ben Crump, a civil rights lawyer representing the household, described Lyoya's loss of life as an "execution" and referred to as for the officer concerned to be "terminated for participating in pointless, extreme use of lethal drive."

He additionally stated Lyoya's household requested "that the state lawyer cost him [the officer] to the total extent of the regulation for killing their son, for breaking their hearts, for making his younger youngsters orphans, fatherless."

The Grand Rapids Police Division has been contacted for remark. Schurr couldn't instantly be reached for remark.