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Los Angeles Police Department

'Heart has been ripped out': Mom of teen killed by LA cop in Burlington store prayed, held daughter as she died

LOS ANGELES – Soledad Peralta and her daughter were trying on dresses for Christmas in a Burlington store Thursday when they heard screams.

Her daughter, Valentina Orellana-Peralta, 14, locked the doors to the dressing room. They hit the floor, hugged one another tightly, closed their eyes and prayed. 

Moments later, three pops sounded, and Valentina started convulsing. 

"I tried to wake her up by shaking her, but she didn't wake up," Peralta said in a statement read by one of her attorneys as others behind her held up large photos of the teen. 

A Los Angeles police officer had fired on a man seen on video beating a woman with a metal bike lock. One of the bullets pierced a wall behind the suspect and hit the teen – who had been in the USA for only six months and dreamed of becoming an American citizen and engineer. She died in her mother's arms. 

Peralta said she screamed but help didn't immediately arrive. Police eventually pulled her from the dressing room, she said. Her daughter's body remained on the ground, limp. 

She and Valentina's father, Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas – who traveled from their native Chile – shared more about their daughter and the day she was killed during a news conference Tuesday with their attorneys, who vowed justice for the teen. Peralta sobbed, wearing a sign that read, "Justicia para nuestra hija, Valentina," which translates from Spanish to "Justice for our daughter, Valentina."

Her father wore a similar sign in English. Nearby, a large photo of their daughter sat on an easel surrounded by white roses.

Soledad Peralta and Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas, the parents of Valentina Orellana-Peralta, attend in a news conference outside the Los Angeles Police Department headquraters in Los Angeles, Tuesday, Dec. 28, 2021. The parents of Valentina Orellana-Peralta, the 14-year-old girl killed by a stray bullet fired by an LAPD officer at a North Hollywood clothing store last week, and their attorneys held a news conference to discuss the family's demand for transparency from the Los Angeles Police Department. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu) ORG XMIT: CARC103

"To see a son or daughter die in your arms is one of the greatest pains and most profound pains that any human being can imagine," Peralta said through a translator at the news conference. "Valentina meant the world to us, to her family, to her friends and to her schoolmates. And now our sweet angel has left forever."

The shooting Thursday sparked intense criticism of the LAPD and questions about the tactics police used when an officer fired with a long rifle in a crowded department store two days before Christmas. Valentina and the suspect, Daniel Elena Lopez, 24, died in the shooting. 

The LAPD released an edited video package online Monday that included 911 calls, police radio transmissions, body camera footage and surveillance video from the shooting. The array of footage showed the suspect's erratic movements in the store, his attacks on multiple customers and the moment the officer fired.

Video released:Los Angeles officer told to 'slow down' before shots fired at Burlington store, killing 14-year-old girl

'Devastating':Coroner identifies 14-year-old girl killed by Los Angeles police in Burlington store

In the footage, police didn't give any commands to the suspect, who was shot down the aisle from a bloodied assault victim. He held the metal bike lock and a piece of artwork when he was shot.

The lone officer who fired was told to "slow down" more than a dozen times by other responding officers before shots were fired, police footage shows. He was placed on administrative leave, the department confirmed to USA TODAY, and was not publicly identified. 

The officers were armed with a variety of weapons, including nonlethal firearms, and made their way toward the suspect in the midst of his attack on a woman who was shopping in the store. The officer who fired was armed with a long rifle and offered to lead the group of officers. 

This undated handout photo courtesy of The family of Valentina Orellana-Peralta shows Valentina Orellana-Peralta - Bodycam footage of the "chaotic" police shooting of a teenager in a  California department store was released Monday, as critics claimed officers were all-too-ready to open fire.

Fourteen-year-old Valentina Orellana-Peralta was in a changing room when a stray bullet fired by a policeman came through the wall and hit her, killing her instantly. (Photo by Handout / The family of Valentina Orellana-Peralta / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO /The family of Valentina Orellana-Peralta" - NO MARKETING - NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS (Photo by HANDOUT/The family of Valentina Orellana/AFP via Getty Images) ORG XMIT: 0 ORIG FILE ID: AFP_9VA9KL.jpg

How officers respond to such incidents has evolved over the years. A 911 call released by police showed officers were told the suspect had been shooting inside the crowded store – information that was later deemed incorrect. 

Since the shooting in 1999 at Columbine High School in Colorado, police departments across the country have changed procedures and protocols on responding to active shooters. Instead of securing an area and waiting for backup, law enforcement officers have been trained to engage immediately on the scene. 

An active shooter presentation by the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, which has jurisdiction for a large area surrounding the city of LA, notes the primary goal when law enforcement officers contact a suspect is to "stop suspect's deadly behavior" and "take the suspect into custody" with the least amount of force necessary. Officers should "give clear and concise orders to the suspect." 

Attorneys for Valentina's family said police could have done plenty differently to prevent her death. 

"Never should this 14-year-old girl ended up as collateral damage," civil rights attorney Ben Crump said Tuesday. "We should not have to sacrifice innocent life in the name of safety when it was foreseeable that two days before Christmas, there were going to be people in a shopping plaza shopping." 

The teen's father had planned the trip from Chile to see her for Christmas. They were going to attend a Lakers game and see LeBron James play. They chatted on the phone the day before her death about how she'd passed her math and physics exams at High Tech Los Angeles Charter High School. He said she loved skateboarding and had a new skateboard she wanted to show friends at school. Her favorite color was pink. 

"It is like my whole heart has been ripped out of my body," Larenas said in a statement read by attorneys. "My daughter was special. She had dreams, and tragically those dreams have been overshadowed by this nightmare that prevents me from sleeping at night."

He said Christmas gifts ordered online for her were delivered to their home after her death. The pain of seeing those gifts, he said, "cannot be articulated."

The gifts, he said through tears, would be placed on her grave. 

Flowers and baloons are left along with a sign reading "Release the Footage Moore" at a makeshift memorial for the teenage girl who was killed by a police stray bullet at a Burlington coat factory in North Hollywood, California, December 27, 2021. - Bodycam footage of the "chaotic" police shooting of a teenager in a crowded California department store was expected to be released Monday, as criticism swelled that officers were all-too-ready to open fire.

Fourteen-year-old Valentina Orellana-Peralta was trying on clothes in a changing room when a stray bullet came through the wall and hit her, killing her instantly on December 23. (Photo by Robyn Beck / AFP) (Photo by ROBYN BECK/AFP via Getty Images) ORG XMIT: 0 ORIG FILE ID: AFP_9VA8PV.jpg
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