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Jury rules in LA’s favor in accidental police shooting of teen at Burlington store in North Hollywood

Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas, father of Valentina Orellana-Peralta, speaks during a news conference.
Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas, father of Valentina Orellana Peralta, speaks during a news conference outside the Los Angeles Police Department headquarters in 2021. (AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu, File)
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A jury ruled in favor of the city of Los Angeles on Thursday, May 7, in a civil lawsuit brought by the parents of a teenage girl accidentally shot by a Los Angeles police officer in a North Hollywood clothing and home accessories store in 2021.

The 14-year-old girl, Valentina Orellana-Peralta, was killed Dec. 23, 2021, while shopping with her mother for Christmas dresses at the Burlington store at 12121 Victory Blvd. The girl was in a second-floor dressing room when a bullet fired by Officer William Dorsey Jones passed through a wall and struck her.

The plaintiffs were Orellana-Peralta’s father and mother, Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas and Soledad Peralta. Civil lawsuits often seek monetary damages.

Police had gone into the store in search of a suspect who assaulted people with a metal bicycle lock. That suspect, 24-year-old Daniel Elena Lopez, was also killed. Police said at the time that a bullet Jones fired ricocheted off the floor, passed through a dressing-room wall and struck Orellana-Peralta.

In 2024, the state Attorney General’s Office announced it would not pursue any criminal charges against Dorsey, concluding that the evidence did not show, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the officer involved acted without the intent to defend himself and others from what he reasonably believed to be imminent death or serious bodily injury.

The AG’s Office did recommend that the LAPD consider making changes to “improve lines of communication in response to ‘immediate-action-and-rapid deployment’ scenarios.”

LAPD officers were trained in ‘background awareness’ a month before Burlington shooting

At the news conference with their attorneys days after the shooting, Orellana-Peralta’s parents said their daughter came to Los Angeles from Chile about six months earlier and had dreams of becoming an engineer, an American citizen and going to see a Los Angeles Lakers game with her father.

“She wanted to be here in the United States because this was the land of opportunity, and she was excited about that,” attorney Erica Contreras said, translating for Orellana-Peralta’s father, Juan Pablo Orellana Larenas.

Orellana-Peralta attended High Tech Los Angeles Charter School.

The shooting prompted protests decrying police shootings, and activists called for the arrest and prosecution of the officer. City Councilman Paul Krekorian at the time called the teen’s death an “unspeakably horrendous tragedy.”

The city Police Commission ruled in 2022 that the officer violated department policy in the shooting. The panel determined that the first shot he fired was within policy, but the second and third were not. Then-Chief Michel Moore determined that Jones “inaccurately assessed” the threat posed by the suspect, saying he should have been able to ascertain that he was not dealing with an active shooter.

It is unclear which shot struck the girl.

Following Thursday’s verdict, attorney Nicholas Rowley, who represented the family, called it “the most devastating loss of my career. …

“I don’t lose very often, but the times that I have I can understand it. I can’t understand this one. I don’t get it,” Rowley said on a video posted on Instagram.

During the trial, Rowley argued that Jones charged into the store ahead of other officers and failed to heed orders to slow down. He said the fitting rooms were clearly visible on body-worn camera footage and should have been a warning to officers that people might be in the line of fire.

Los Angeles City Attorney Hydee Feldstein Soto issued a statement saying the city “shares in the grief” suffered by the teen’s family, while standing by the actions of the officer.

“Society calls upon our police officers to risk their own safety to protect others and run towards danger when others run away,” Feldstein Soto said. “Officer Jones answered that call in pursuit of a violent man threatening bystanders and beating a woman inside the store. We stand by him, knowing that he has carried the burden of Valentina’s death with him for many years.

“We thank the jury for their professionalism and for setting their sympathies aside to follow the law and reach the correct conclusion, as difficult a task as that may have been,” the city attorney said. “This event was a horrible tragedy and every parent’s and every law enforcement officer’s worst nightmare.”