A new federal lawsuit details how an Alabama teenager, asleep in his childhood bedroom, was fatally shot when a police SWAT team broke down the front door of his family’s home. Randall Adjessom, 16, ...
Randall Adjessom, 16, was shot to death last year by the Mobile, Alabama Police Department’s S.W.A.T. team. The police were looking for marijuana allegedly owned by Adjessom’s older brother—who not ...
Randall Adjessom, 16, was sleeping in his childhood home when SWAT police used a battering ram to break down his front door on November 13, 2023, just after 5:30 a.m. while it was still dark outside.
The wrongful death lawsuit says Randall Adjessom came out of his bedroom with a gun when Mobile police broke down his ...
In Alabama, you can buy THC at the grocery. Also, you can be shot by cops looking for weed in a no-knock raid.
Attorneys for the family of 16-year-old Randall Adjessom, who was fatally shot during a SWAT raid last November, have filed a federal wrongful-death lawsuit, calling the incident “racially ...
shows 16-year-old Randall Adjessom posing for a portrait at his home in Mobile, Alabama. The mother of a 16-year-old who was shot by SWAT police during a no-knock, predawn raid in Alabama on Nov ...
The Mobile Police Department in Alabama is facing a federal lawsuit following the tragic shooting death of 16-year-old Randall Adjessom during a controversial no-knock raid. This incident echoes ...
This photo shows Randall Adjessom, who was 16 when he was fatally shot by police at his family’s home in Mobile, Alabama, in November 2023, according to a federal lawsuit. Grant & Eisenhofer An ...
The lawsuit says that when Adjessom realized the intruders were police, "Randall immediately began ... as well as for claims under Alabama's wrongful death statute. The City of Mobile did not ...
predawn raid in Alabama, filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the police officers involved and the city of Mobile. Randall Adjessom was sleeping in his home when police executed a warrant as ...