Pubdate: Sat, 08 May 1999 Source: Richmond Times-Dispatch (VA) Copyright: 1999, Richmond Newspapers Inc. Contact: 804-775-8072 Website: http://www.gateway-va.com/ Author: Mark Bowes, Times-Dispatch Staff Writer POLICE SHOOT, KILL HENRICO MAN 4th time this year county officers have shot a suspect A 29-year-old convicted drug offender was shot and killed by police early yesterday after authorities said he wielded a machete at several officers who had stormed his Lakeside house in search of drugs. Police said William Keith Green told the officers several times during the confrontation that "he was not going to be arrested, he was not going back to jail and that they would have to shoot him," said Sgt. Joe Morris, a Henrico police spokesman. Green was talking to his girlfriend on the phone when police entered his home. "He told her that 'I'm not going to jail and they're going to have to kill me,' " said one officer with knowledge of the incident. "He was clearly combative and encouraging the officers to shoot him." Police said Green was shot five times in his midsection by three narcotics officers after he was repeatedly told to drop his weapon. Officers first tried to subdue him with pepper spray, but "it didn't appear to have any effect on him," Morris said. The incident was the fourth this year in which a criminal suspect was shot by a Henrico County police officer. Green is the second suspect to be killed by police fire this year. "They just run in cycles," Sgt. James Price, the department's internal affairs officer, said of the shootings. "Who's to say what causes a number of them to come in succession as opposed to having just one [in] one year, and having none the next year. Each and every incident is unique into itself with its own set of circumstances." With the exception of 1997, Henrico has recorded one shooting per year since 1995 in which an officer wounded or killed a suspect in a confrontation. One man was killed by police in 1995, others were wounded in 1996 and 1998. Green, of 2128 Dumbarton Road, was pronounced dead at Medical College of Virginia Hospitals shortly after the 1:45 a.m. incident. According to Virginia Department of Corrections records, Green was sentenced in 1990 to prison terms totaling nine years and one month for convictions of simple assault, possession of marijuana and conspiracy to distribute marijuana in Richmond and Hanover County. He received four years and one month in Richmond on the assault and marijuana possession charges, and five years in Hanover for the conspiracy offense, spokesman Larry Traylor said. In the Hanover case, Green was one of 19 people indicted in connection with a marijuana distribution ring that authorities believed was responsible for transporting 300 pounds of pot each week into the Richmond area. During a two-month investigation, authorities confiscated about 100 pounds of marijuana, about $150,000 and four vehicles. Green was discharged from parole in November 1994, Traylor said. It was unclear how long he had been incarcerated. Yesterday's incident unfolded as Henrico narcotics officers tried to serve a search warrant at Green's home. According to an affidavit to search the home, a police informer told investigators that he had seen a quantity of marijuana inside the house within the past 72 hours. When police arrived at the home they identified themselves, announced their intentions and "demanded entry into the house," Morris said. When they got no response, the officers forced their way into a rear door and tried to locate anyone inside before beginning the drug search, which is standard procedure. "It's a safety issue that they notify anyone that's actually inside the dwelling of a location where a search is being conducted . . . and then secure those people before the actual search takes place," Morris said. It was during the sweep of the home that officers confronted Green, who had a machete. After spraying Green with the chemical agent, "he continued to come at the police officers in a threatening manner with the machete over his head, making hacking motions," Morris said. Several times he struck the side of a doorway with the weapon, Morris added. The three officers then fired a total of eight shots at Green with their .45-caliber service pistols. Five shots struck him, one officer said. Police later searched the home and recovered several ounces of marijuana, some prescription pills, $65 in cash, drug paraphernalia and smoking devices, material to package drugs, a set of scales that can be used to weigh drugs, a vial of "white crystal substance," a cellular phone and a pager. Documents, photos and a roll of film also were taken, according to an inventory of items seized. Police also found copies of arrest warrants from Newport News that indicated Green had been arrested in recent months on charges of stalking and domestic assault, an officer said. Yesterday's incident marked the second time in recent months that pepper spray was ineffective in subduing a suspect. In March, a Henrico officer wounded a man armed with a knife inside the Wal-Mart Super Center in Short Pump after a dose of pepper spray failed to have any effect on him. "It's never been 100 percent," Morris said. "It's not going to be effective in every situation. It's just a tool that we use . . . in hopes of subduing offenders without using deadly force." Police officials declined to release the names of the three officers until the case can be reviewed by Henrico Commonwealth's Attorney Toby Vick. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart