Chief Gorden Eden says police were unable to recover video from the body camera worn by the officer who shot 19-year-old Mary Hawkes. He also says he doesn’t yet know if the gun found by her body was loaded, how many times she was shot, whether she had her front or back to the officer when she was killed, if any other officers’ cameras captured the event or whether any witnesses have corroborated the officer’s statement that the woman pulled a gun on him.

He also said he had “no information” about the disciplinary record of the officer who shot Hawkes, Jeremy Dear.

Eden did say this was the first shooting by Dear since he joined the force as a patrol officer in 2007. But The Albuquerque Journal reported he was at the scene of a December 2011 shooting that was cited in recent report from the Department of Justice ordering Albuquerque police to reduce the use of deadly force and reform a long-standing culture of aggression and abuse.

In that case, court records from a lawsuit filed by the family of Alan Gomez indicate Dear told two different stories about the moments before the shooting, and a recording of his initial statement went missing until a judge in the case issued a sanction.

Hawkes is the third person to be killed by Albuquerque officers in five weeks, the 28th since 2010 and the first since the Justice Department issued its scathing report of the department for its use of excessive force. Among the findings: a majority of the 20 shootings by officers that it investigated were not justified.