The City of Philadelphia will pay $4.4 million to Philippe Holland, the pizza delivery driver who was shot several times in April 2014 in the Cedar Park neighborhood by two police officers who thought he was involved in a shooting.
The settlement is the largest in the city’s history for a victim of a police shooting, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.
“We will strive to ensure that tragedies such as this do not happen again in our City. The Philadelphia Police Department has agreed under the settlement to implement a new training protocol for all current and new plainclothes police officers,” City Solicitor Sozi Pedro Tulante said in a statement released today by the Mayor’s Office.
Holland had just delivered a pizza to a home near 51st and Willows at about 10 p.m. on April 22, 2014 when two plain-clothes officers, Mitchell Farrell and Kevin Hanvey, approached him with their guns drawn. Farrell and Hanvey were investigating a shooting in the area. Fearing a robbery, Holland ran to his car and tried to drive away. The officers opened fire, hitting Holland in the neck, head and leg while he was behind the wheel. Police regulations prohibit shooting at a moving vehicle.
Holland was hospitalized following the shooting, and neighbors helped raise money for his hospital bills. He suffers long-term effects from the shooting, including seizures, according to reports.
Former Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey apologized to Holland on behalf of the police department following the shooting.
The shooting also spurred a citywide conversation on police reform ahead of a Department of Justice report in 2015 that made sweeping recommendations related to police use of excessive force.
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