Anthony Previte Credit: Kim Previte / Courtesy

Anthony Previte was an active and inquisitive person.

His mother, Kim, remembers how her eldest son would lose himself in museums for hours, often asking for behind-the-scenes tours.

He enjoyed skateboarding and listened to a wide range of music, from Beethoven to Bruno Mars. He cared for a golden retriever he adored, and he danced and sang any chance he got.

โ€œHe loved every aspect of life,โ€ Kim said.

Anthonyโ€™s life was cut short on July 22, 2024, after he experienced a mental health crisis that resulted in a stand-off with seven police departments outside of his familyโ€™s Kensington home. Over a year later, his family has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against the departments and individual officers.

The complaint, filed Dec. 9, claims that officers were aware of Anthonyโ€™s mental health history yet they โ€œquickly engaged in a series of escalatory actions, using military-style tactics and equipmentโ€ that eventually led to the 29-year-oldโ€™s death.

โ€œThe Previte family has been through the unimaginable,โ€ the familyโ€™s lawyer, Aaron D. Rosenberg, said in a statement. โ€œThe fact that Anthonyโ€™s death came at the hands of those meant to help him makes it even harder to bear. The Prevites intend to hold accountable those responsible.โ€

Surveillance footage shows Anthony Previte pointing a gun outside a bathroom window in his family residence in Kensington
Surveillance footage shows Anthony Previte pointing a gun outside a bathroom window in his family residence in Kensington Credit: Courtesyโ€”

On that day in July, 2024, Kensington police visited the Previte familyโ€™s house on 6 Olivia Lane for a wellness check. Authorities had received a call from Anthony the night before, who claimed that his grandmotherโ€™s cookbook was tied to missing persons and cannibalism, according to the complaint.

When police arrived, Anthony barricaded himself in the house. Kensington police made several unsuccessful attempts to communicate with him from outside, and additional police departments surrounded the home with rifles and deployed drones and heavily-armored vehicles.

Several hours later, Anthony ran out the front door. Police shot him 15 to 20 times, immediately killing him.

This July, nearly a year after Anthonyโ€™s death, the New Hampshire Attorney Generalโ€™s Office concluded that the seven officers involved in the incident were justified in using deadly force and announced that no criminal action would be brought against them by the state.

Kim said the time after her sonโ€™s death had already been โ€œvery difficultโ€ but the Attorney Generalโ€™s finding was โ€œgut wrenching.โ€ She said her family had always appreciated the police because of tough situations they previoulsy went through, but she found it difficult to understand how the events escalated the way they did.

Their lawsuit states that Anthony started to develop mental health issues during the COVID-19 pandemic. In the days leading up to their sonโ€™s death, Kim and her husband, Andy, discussed how best to address Anthonyโ€™s mental health challenges, which included paranoia and hallucinations.

Kim said she remembers Anthony as a giving and charitable person. For Christmas, he would always ask to have a gift donated to Toys for Tots. She remembered one day when Anthony was at a skate park and found a homeless encampment in the woods nearby. He gathered all the canned goods in the familyโ€™s home and brought them to the encampment.

โ€œHe was always willing to help,โ€ she said.

When Anthony worked as a flagger, he would dance as he switched between a โ€œstopโ€ and โ€œslowโ€ sign to manage traffic between Durham and Newmarket.

Some passersby would honk or wave at him. Kim said a lot of people stopped on the side of the road to give her son a coffee or small appreciation cards.

โ€œThe littlest things were special to him,โ€ she said.

She hopes the lawsuit will hold the officers and police departments involved in the shooting to account. Kim believes her sonโ€™s story could have ended differently if police had considered his mental health history in the moment.

โ€œItโ€™s imperative for the police to consider the mental health factor,โ€ she said.


Emilia Wisniewski is a general assignment reporter that covers Franklin, Warner and Henniker. She is also the engagement editor. She can be reached at ewisniewski@cmonitor.com or (603) 369-3307