The mall reopened the day after the shooting at 6 AM, and the two officers who were involved in the shooting were placed on administrative leave pending the investigation. Protests were organized by a Birmingham activist group called Justice League on the following Saturday. Protesters also called for a boycott of the Galleria. On November 26, 2018, a protest gathered outside Hoover City Hall, calling for the Hoover Police Department to release video from the police
body cameras and mall surveillance cameras for public review. The protestors then shut down
U.S. Highway 31, carrying signs reading "
Black Lives Matter", "Justice for EJ", and "Justice starts with the truth", as they marched to the Riverchase Galleria, the site of the shooting. Additional protests throughout the city of Hoover were organized in the following weeks in multiple shopping areas, public interstates, and private residences of Hoover City Officials, some resulting in the arrest of participants.
Family of Bradford The family of Bradford hired civil rights attorney
Benjamin Crump. Additionally, the Alabama chapter of the
NAACP issued a press release condemning the "extreme and excessive police force." According to various members of Bradford's family, no one from the Hoover Police Department informed them of his death. In addition, they were not provided with any details of the police shooting until the November 28 meeting. One of Bradford's relatives called for the resignation of both Chief Derzis and Hoover Mayor Frank Brocato for their actions shortly after Bradford's death. A meeting between the family of Bradford and Mayor Brocato, Chief Derzis, and Councilman Derrick Murphy occurred on November 28. The city leaders apologized to the Bradford family for the shooting and answered what questions they could regarding the events. A funeral for Bradford was set for December 1 at the
Boutwell Memorial Auditorium with Reverend
Jesse Jackson to speak. A "preliminary anatomical review" was planned on November 29 for the following day to determine the number of shots that hit Bradford and whether Bradford was hit from the front or from behind. At a press conference on December 3, Crump was joined by attorneys Rodney Barganier and Frankie Lee in revealing the results of the independent autopsy. The review concluded that Bradford was shot three times from behind while he was running. The locations of the shots were to the right side of the head, the base of the neck, and the right portion of the hip. The bullets all entered from an upward angle and the shot to the head was the fatal shot, entering from the back right of the head and exiting above the left eye. Derzis revealed on the 3rd that the ALEA had asked city leaders to not reveal critical information while the investigation was in progress. A Justice for E.J. Community Forum was held with members from the
Nation of Islam and
Black Lives Matter, among others, at the Muhammad Mosque in Birmingham. The city additionally postponed a Christmas tree lighting ceremony that was to take place on November 29 due to threats that the lighting would be protested. A fourth protest occurred at the AMC Patton Creek movie theater on December 2. In April 2025 it was ruled that the city of Hoover and the owners of the Riverchase Galleria were not responsible for Bradford's death. ==References==