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CONCORD, N.H. (AP) – Video of Liko Kenney fatally shooting Franconia Police Cpl. Bruce McKay doesn’t resolve the case for Kenney’s family, their lawyer says.

“There’s a lot more questions that have to be answered than what we had previously thought,” lawyer Mark Sisti said Tuesday. “The appropriateness of the behavior that took place prior to the shooting, I guess, would be the entire universe of questions.”

The video, released by the state Monday along with 1,000 pages of documents, taped interviews, photos and dispatch calls, shows the moments leading to the violent confrontation between Kenney, 24, and McKay, 48, who died moments apart during a traffic stop on May 11.

Kenney’s friends and family have said since that he feared McKay and often talked about him. They believe that fear contributed to the shooting.

Footage from the dashboard camera of McKay’s police car captures the incident from an initial traffic stop for speeding, Kenney driving away, and a final confrontation down the road. It shows McKay using his sport utility vehicle to push Kenney’s Toyota Supra, boxing it in against a farm tractor. Soon afterward, McKay pepper-sprays Kenney and passenger Caleb Macaulay and walks away; Kenney leans out the open car window and shoots seven times. The video doesn’t show another man at the scene fatally shooting Kenney moments later.

Sisti questions why McKay used his sport utility vehicle to force Kenney’s car farther into a parking area when Kenney already had backed off the road. He also is troubled that McKay pepper-sprayed Kenney and Macaulay without a verbal warning.

“We’ll be responding to this now that it’s out there for public consumption. It’s very troubling,” he said.

The attorney general’s report on the investigation said McKay’s use of force against Kenney was justified. Besides the immediate circumstances, the report noted the two had clashed four years earlier during a traffic stop that resulted in Kenney pleading guilty to assaulting McKay and resisting arrest.

The report also said ex-Marine Gregory W. Floyd’s fatal shooting of Kenney was legally justified. Having twice seen Kenney drive over the already-wounded McKay, Floyd reasonably feared for his and McKay’s lives, the report said. But prosecutors concluded Kenney’s life was not in danger when he shot McKay four times in the back and drove over him.

Jeff Strelzin, New Hampshire’s top homicide prosecutor and author of the report, said there always will be gaps in the story because the video didn’t capture everything, but the case essentially is closed.

“We’ve reached our conclusion in the case as far as any potential criminal charges and have issued our final report,” Strelzin said. “If, like in any other case, people were to come forward with more information, our people would gather it.”

Meanwhile, a committee of concerned citizens and local officials in Franconia is looking for ways to move on from the tragedy. State Rep. Martha McLeod, a member of the Franconia Area Recovery & Reconciliation Committee, said the video confirms the story that most in town already knew.

“I’m not sure that there’s really much of a surprise in the information. It’s really just a matter of having to remind people again of, you know, the tragedy that happened,” McLeod said. “We’re more interested in moving forward and making sure that the families know that we’re thinking about them.”

As for unanswered questions, Strelzin said he assumes McKay pushed the car with his cruiser because Kenney already had fled earlier. Macaulay told prosecutors Kenney was so frightened during the first stop that he took off toward his uncle’s home in Easton so there would be witnesses when McKay did confront him.

Strelzin noted that the video shows Kenney’s car lurching forward slightly as McKay drives up to force him back.

“I think McKay’s thinking he’s going to keep running away (and thinks), ‘I’m going to try to pin him in so he doesn’t try to run away.”‘

The report notes, and Strelzin repeated, that Kenney’s parents and their lawyer did not respond to repeated attempts to interview them.

Friends and one relative who spoke to prosecutors described Kenney as troubled.

Matthew Chernicki, a friend since childhood, said Kenney was the type of person who would give someone the shirt off his back, but he also called him a “sociopath” who needed counseling. He said friends joked that “On a hike with Liko, you never knew if you were coming back.” Despite that, Chernicki sold Kenney the gun.

Chernicki said Kenney would get angry at the sight of a Franconia police cruiser and blamed McKay for all of his run-ins with the police. Chernicki, a firefighter, said Kenney’s distrust of authority affected even their friendship.

A family friend, Don Clark, said Kenney’s parents, who live part-time in Hawaii, feared their son was suicidal earlier this year. Clark said Kenney “would rant about Corporal McKay, saying that Corporal McKay was crazy and that Corporal McKay made him crazy.”

Bill Kenney said he had a rocky relationship with his nephew, who once scared Bill Kenney’s wife so much she obtained a restraining order against him. He said the day after the shootings, he looked in his nephew’s cabin and saw “my last days” written in a day planner.

Liko Kenney had been convicted recently of assaulting a younger relative. Based on that case, McKay wrote a note 21/2 weeks before the shootings warning other police officers that Kenney was armed, potentially volatile and had a history of resisting arrest.

“This notice is for informational purposes only in the event an officer finds them self working an incident involving Kenney,” McKay wrote.

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