QuickTake:

After being released from the hospital, Tyler James Johnson was jailed on charges of unlawfully using a weapon and menacing. He had been walking in the street brandishing a shotgun, police said.

The man shot by Eugene police on Nov. 12 has been identified as Tyler James Johnson, a 40-year-old man from the Eugene area, said JoAnn Miller, a deputy district attorney for Lane County.

On Nov. 12, police received “seven or eight different calls from citizens” about a man now identified as Johnson carrying a shotgun in the Whiteaker neighborhood and “walking in and out of traffic, trying to stop traffic, pointing the shotgun at individuals,” Eugene Police Chief Chris Skinner said on the day of the shooting.

Police previously said the man sustained injuries that were not life-threatening.

Miller said Thursday that Johnson had been released from the hospital and was booked into the Lane County Jail on Wednesday, Nov. 19, according to online records.

Miller said prosecutors have charged Johnson with unlawful use of a weapon and menacing, with both charges specifying the involvement of a firearm.

The weapons charge is considered a Class C felony, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison. The menacing charge is considered a Class A misdemeanor.

The police use of lethal force means the Lane County Interagency Deadly Force Investigation Team — rather than Eugene police — will lead the investigation of the shooting.

Skinner told the Eugene Police Commission, the citizens’ advisory group that the reported menacing exemplified what’s required of police at “what at that moment was total chaos, with an individual with a modified shotgun menacing our community members.”

No injuries to officers or bystanders were reported.

Court records from Lincoln County show that Lincoln City police arrested Johnson on Oct. 16, and that he has pending charges that include assaulting a public safety officer.

An affidavit filed in Lincoln County Circuit Court states that Johnson bit a Lincoln City police officer’s finger after he was confronted by police about a van blocking the entrance to a shopping center. Other charges from Lincoln County include aggravated harassment in connection with spitting at three officers and also resisting arrest.

Lincoln County Circuit Court records show that Johnson had been released from custody on the condition that he report to a county mental health services provider and “follow all recommendations of treatment professionals.”