Cleveland Police announced they have fired police officer Timothy Loehmann for the 2014 shooting death of 12 year old Tamir Rice.
Mr Loehmann was not fired for the shooting. Police Chief Calvin Williams confirmed it was due to inaccuracies on his job application in which he failed to disclose that his previous police department allowed him to resign rather than being fired at the end of a six-month probation period.
The officer driving the car at the time, Frank Garmback, has been suspended for ten days for his role in Tamir's death. William Cunningham, the third officer on the scene, will face administrative charges.
In November 2014, someone called the police to alert them they saw a boy that was possibly armed playing nearby. The caller said the gun could have been a toy, however, this doesn't appear to have been relayed to Mr Loehmann and Mr Gramback as they rushed to the scene.
The 911 dispatcher who took the call was suspended for eight days earlier this year for failure to disclose that Tamir may have been a juvenile and that the gun may have been fake.
Tamir was actually playing with a toy pistol at a recreation centre across from the Rice family home in Cleveland. Tamir's sister, Samaria, rushed to the scene but was promptly arrested and placed in the back of the police car.
Officers failed to administer proper first aid and the child died the next day from the gunshot wound.
In 2016, prosecutors determined that the incident, though tragic, was a "perfect storm of human error” and did not bring criminal charges against any of the three officers involved.
In April 2016, the Rice family was awarded $6m (£4.7m) in lieu of a lengthy trial. In a statement to the Washington Post, the family's attorneys said that “although historic in financial terms, no amount of money can adequately compensate for the loss of a life.”
A federal civil rights investigation is still pending.