A man who crashed a car at the Chinese Consulate this month had a crossbow and arrows and swung a knife at officers before a police sergeant killed him, San Francisco police said today, offering the first official details of the attack.
San Francisco police showed body camera footage from the officers who responded to the October 9 attack on the consulate in a residential neighbourhood in the city. The footage showed the car inside the consulate’s lobby and people rushing out of a damaged door.
San Francisco Police Acting Commander Mark Im, speaking at a virtual town hall, said Zhanyuan Yang got out of his car, where police found a crossbow and arrows, and stood against a wall. Yang was covering his face with his left arm after a security guard sprayed him with pepper spray and was hiding a knife in his right hand, Im said.
Im said Yang then turned toward Sergeant Troy Carrasco, who was the first to arrive on the scene, and a consulate security guard, and made “multiple, rapid, downward swinging motions with the knife” in their direction.
Carrasco can be seen in body camera footage touching Yang’s back and asking “Does he have a gun?” before Yang, who is rubbing his face with his left arm, turns toward Carrasco and the security guard and starts swinging a knife. The footage shows Carrasco then opens fire and shortly after shouts, “You should have told me he had a knife!”