South San Francisco man shot by police charged with assaulting, resisting officers – The Mercury News Today Us News



REDWOOD CITY — A South San Francisco man who was shot seven times by police in December and survived is facing multiple criminal charges for allegedly brandishing a knife at officers after they went to his home for a mental health crisis call, prosecutors said.

Luis Adrian Francisco Manzo has been charged with one count of assault on a peace officer with a deadly weapon and four counts of resisting an officer with enhancements for use of a deadly weapon, according to the San Mateo County District Attorney’s Office.

Francisco Manzo, 28, appeared in court Friday to surrender on an arrest warrant, and was denied bail by San Mateo County Superior Court Judge Jeffrey B. Jackson on the basis that he still poses a threat to public safety, prosecutors said.

He was shot on the morning of Dec. 8, after several officers from the South San Francisco Police Department responded to a call from Francisco Manzo’s relative, who said that he was threatening to harm himself and was armed with two knives. Authorities encountered Francisco Manzo in the hallway of the family’s home and claimed that he, after initially following officers’ instructions, pulled out a knife and walked toward the officers, asking “them to kill him.”

One officer fired his stun gun, but two officers then fired their guns as Francisco Manzo got closer, authorities and prosecutors said.


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