🚨 The Attorney General's office is investigating the death of a Jersey City man

🚨 The man's family said Andrew Jerome Washington had a 'mental health crisis'

🚨 Washington's sister said he had a bipolar condition


JERSEY CITY — The Attorney General’s Office is investigating a police-involved shooting inside a home that may have stemmed from a mental health crisis Sunday afternoon

Jersey City police were called to a home by an EMS team on Randolph Avenue around 2:30 p.m. after an officer fired his service weapon twice, striking a man twice, according to the Attorney General's Office.  The man was taken to a hospital where he was pronounced dead.

The Attorney General's office did not disclose the circumstances of the shooting or the identity of the man struck.

The man's family spoke to the media about the events they said led to the shooting. Doris Ervin told ABC 7 Eyewitness News the man shot was her nephew, Andrew Jerome Washington, 52  while he was experiencing what she called a “mental health crisis."

The family called the Jersey City Medical Center Crisis Center, a facility Washington had been released from a few days earlier,  seeking help for the second time during the weekend, another aunt, Lisa Menendez, told PIX 11.  Washington was banging the walls and talking loudly to himself.  After a crisis team arrived they called for assistance from police.

Map showing Randolph Ave in Jersey City
Map showing Randolph Ave in Jersey City (Canva)
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Family asked for police to not use a 'real' gun

Menendez said she asked police to use a pellet gun or a conducted energy device commonly called a Taser if they had to shoot at him. Officials have not said what prompted police to fire at Washington.

Washington yelled at the officers, who sent family members outside before the shots were fired, Mendez told PIX 11. He later died in surgery at Jersey City Medical Center.

“I think the crisis center should’ve done a better job. The police should’ve done a better job. They should’ve had more compassion,” Mendez told PIX 11.

Washington's sister, Courtnie Washington, told PIX 11 that her brother was diagnosed with a bipolar condition 20 years ago.

"We will never be the same and pray we are given answers and the hospital and police take accountability for not providing the care he deserved and for killing a man in his own home while his family begged them to not hurt him," Courtnie wrote in her statement.

The state Attorney General's Office is legally required to investigate a person's death that occurs during an encounter with law enforcement acting in the officer’s official capacity or while the decedent is in custody.

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