Bodycam footage shows Utah cops shooting and killing a drunk man holding a knife to a hostage’s neck

  • Andrew Jacob Preece, 34, was killed in a police-involved shooting on July 25 in Salt Lake City, Utah 
  • Authorities said Preece was holding an unidentified ‘hostage’ with a knife ‘the length of a forearm’
  • An argument broke out between the two men after they tried to steal items from a Smith’s grocery store  
  • A store employee called 911 after they got into the argument and noted the two men appeared intoxicated
  • Officers who arrived at the scene told Preece to ‘drop the knife’ and ‘it’s not worth it’ before opening fire
  • Preece was fatally struck, while the unidentified victim broke free 

Police in Salt Lake City on Friday released body camera footage of two officers that killed a 34-year-old man who appeared to hold a victim at knifepoint.

The newly released footage show the moment two officers fired several rounds and shot dead Andrew Jacob Preece outside a Smith’s grocery store on July 25.

Preece was gunned down by authorities while holding a knife ‘the length of a forearm’ in the victim’s throat.

Cpt. Richard Lewis told reporters during a press conference that the incident happened shortly after 9am when Preece and another unidentified men got into an altercation. 

Andrew Jacob Preece (pictured in an old mugshot) was shot dead by officers with the Salt Lake City Police Department on July 25

Deseret News reports that officers were dispatched to the Smith’s grocery store after Preece and the other man entered the store to steal some items.

But an argument sparked between them while inside and the disagreement continued after they exited into the nearby parking lot.

In a 911 call made available to reporters, the store employee told authorities that the men appeared to be intoxicated.

‘I think they’re drunk or something. They keep fighting each other in the parking lot,’ the employee says ‘They can’t even walk straight.’

The employee adds that one of the men, later identified as Preece, had a knife and that both men ‘keep turning around like they’re going to come back into the store, and they keep looking over here.’

One male officer arrived to the scene first and captured the two men leaving Smith’s grocery store on his body camera

Authorities said Preece held the unidentified victim hostage with a knife, which was described by a store employee as ‘the length of a forearm’

The body camera footage begins when the first Salt Lake City officer arrives to the scene and sees the two men walking down a sidewalk.

Preece appears to have a knife in one hand, while using his other to guide the victim down the walkway.

‘Drop the knife!’ the male officer yells. ‘I will taser you if you won’t stop. Stop right there!’

Suddenly, Preece stops walking and wraps an arm around the other man’s body while holding the knife to his throat.

‘He’s got a hostage!’ the officer says, holding his firearm in one hand and the Taser in the other.

The male officer holsters the Taser as a female officer arrives to the scene, but does not lower his firearm.

Both officers desperately urge Preece to ‘put it down’ as he continues to hold the other man at knifepoint.

‘Dude, it’s not worth it,’ the female officer yells at Preece. ‘I guarantee it dude, I promise you. I don’t make promises I can’t keep.’

When Preece turns his body to face one officer, he leaves part of himself exposed and one officer fires a round.

There’s a short pause before another shot is fired, and then several rounds are fired in rapid succession at Preece.

Preece, injured by the shooting, falls onto the concrete sidewalk while the other man breaks free and run. 

Officers fired around 10 shots during the confrontation. The two officers administered medical attention after the shooting, but Preece succumbed to his wounds. 

Deseret News report that the shooting will be reviewed by an independent Officer Involved Critical Incident team from a separate police department.

Those findings will be given to the Salt Lake County District Attorney’s Office to determine if the officer-involved shooting is justified.