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$11M Awarded To Man Left Paralyzed By San Jose Police Shooting

SAN JOSE (CBS SF) -- A jury Monday awarded $11 million to a man paralyzed last year in a shooting by a San Jose police officer, according to court filings.

Hung Lam, a 38-year-old Vietnamese-American, was holding a knife but only threatening to hurt himself when he was shot in the back by Officer Dondi West on Jan. 3, 2014, according to the complaint filed last year.

Police had said that the wounded man was a suspect in an argument between two men and had advanced on the officer with a knife in the 1800 block of Cape Horn Drive, but Lam, represented by attorney John Burris, disputed that account, saying he was suicidal and talking to his neighbor, who was trying to help him.

After a three-week trial, a jury in federal court in San Jose ruled in favor of Lam.

Police were called at 3:23 p.m. because Lam had been threatening to hurt himself, holding a knife to his abdomen with one hand and a cellphone in the other. His neighbor was trying to talk him out of hurting himself when police arrived, according to the complaint.

As soon as West arrived, she started running toward Lam screaming commands like "drop the knife" and "get on the ground" but Lam was still talking to his neighbor and not facing the officer.

When she reached within 10-15 feet of Lam, she shot him twice in the back, hitting his aorta, lungs and kidney. He was rushed to a hospital and survived due to surgery but was left with no mobility in his legs.

Lam, once a vibrant dancer, was left permanently disabled, according to the complaint.

He was initially charged with assault on a police officer but those charges were dismissed by the time the federal lawsuit was filed in February, according to the complaint.

"The officer's outrageous display of excessive force sentenced Hung Lam to a lifetime in a wheelchair, as a paraplegic," Burris said in a statement Monday.

Burris plans to further discuss the ruling in a news conference on Tuesday afternoon.

© Copyright 2015 by CBS San Francisco and Bay City News Service. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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