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The mother of the man killed at an Alabama mall faints at a prayer meeting for him

"I'm just at a loss of words. I'm trying to be strong during this time and hold up, you know," Pipkins told a gathering at Birmingham's 16th Street Baptist Church about Emantic Bradford Jr.'s shooting death last week at a mall.
She put her head in her hand and, after a few seconds, fell back into the arms of her attorney.
Pipkins fainted, attorney Benjamin Crump said, and was sent to a hospital, where she was being evaluated.
"The doctor said she's going to be OK," Crump said. Further details about her condition weren't immediately available.
Pipkins and her family have demanded answers from police about the Thanksgiving night shooting at the Riverchase Galleria in nearby Hoover.
Hoover police initially said Bradford, 21, shot a 12- and an 18-year-old in the mall after a fight, and that an officer killed him as he fled, brandishing a gun.
Emantic Bradford Jr.'s family is calling for justice in his death.
But police later changed the story, saying witnesses and forensic tests indicated that while Bradford may have been involved in an altercation at the mall, he likely did not fire the rounds that injured the victims.
The initial shooter, who has not been publicly identified, remains at large, and the officer who was working as mall security when he killed Bradford is on administrative leave pending an investigation, police say.
Crump, a civil rights attorney representing Bradford's family, has leveled a series of allegations, including that Bradford actually was trying to help victims to safety when he was shot; that the officer who killed him didn't warn him before shooting; and that police didn't give him medical assistance as he lay dying.
The changing police narrative of why a black man was shot to death in an Alabama mall
Pipkins was one of several speakers at Tuesday evening's church gathering.
Jefferson County Commissioner Sheila Tyson gave a fiery speech about boycotting the mall, CNN affiliate WVTM reported. And Bradford's father emotionally shared memories of his son.
"I can't hear him say 'Daddy' no more," Emantic Bradford Sr. said, according to WVTM. "You'll never walk through my door and call my name again."

'He was not a killer'

In a CNN interview Monday, Pipkins said that because her son was shot in the face, she's not sure if she will be able to hold an open-casket funeral.
"My Thanksgiving will never be the same. I will never be able to see my son's face again or to look into his eyes or to hear him say, 'Mom, I love you,'" she said. "Not even knowing if I'll be able to have an open casket, to see him again."
Bradford had no criminal record, Crump said. He was a caretaker to his father, worked full time and helped his mother financially.
"My son was a loving -- very loving -- young man. He would give any of you the shirt off his back," Pipkins told reporters Sunday. "He loved people, period. He was not a killer."

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