Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson said the city gave the claim to the 
estate's executor out of legal obligation because he asked for it. A 
lawyer for the Rice family said the executor had made a routine public 
records request that should not have generated such a claim.
 
 
 
City officials said they did not and never intended to send a bill to 
the Rice family. "Again, apologizing to the Rice family if in fact this 
has added to any grief or pain that they may have," Jackson told 
reporters at a news conference on Thursday.
Rice, a black child who was playing with a replica gun in a park, was 
shot by a white police officer. The child's death helped fuel the 
national debate over police use of deadly force, especially against 
minorities.
After the Rice killing, a U.S. Justice Department investigation found 
widespread excessive use of force by Cleveland police. The next day, the
 Rice family filed a federal civil rights lawsuit against the city and 
officers involved.
Jackson said the ambulance expense should never have arisen but that the city was just following normal procedure.
"Should it have happened? No," he said, "because red flags should have been risen. But that didn't happen. Did anybody do anything wrong in this? No, because it's the normal process."
The invoice, dated Wednesday, is for Rice's "last dying expense" and 
includes $450 for an ambulance and $50 for mileage, according to city 
documents.
The claim had yet to be filed with Cuyahoga County probate court, court officials said on Thursday.
"This was a deeply disturbing incident," Rice family attorney Subodh 
Chandra said in a statement. He said the claim made no sense to the 
family. "This adds insult to homicide."
Rice was shot by police officer Timothy Loehmann, who was responding to a
 report of a person with a gun in a park. Rice died the next day.
A grand jury in December declined to bring criminal charges against white officers Loehmann and Frank Garmback.
Earlier on Thursday, U.S. Democratic presidential candidate Hillary 
Clinton tweeted: "Asking Tamir's family to pay for his ambulance is 
heartless. Cleveland should drop this fee."    (Reporting by Suzannah 
Gonzales in Chicago; Writing by Fiona Ortiz; Editing by Bill Trott and 
Matthew Lewis)


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