The Utica Police Department on Thursday provided additional information into a police officer's June 28 shooting of a 13-year-old boy, whose resulting death set off days of protests in the city.

Lt. Ashley Berger, of the Utica Police Department, said in a recorded statement that by releasing an eight-minute "critical incident community briefing" on the department's Facebook page, the department hoped to show transparency of its investigation into the death of Nyah Mway.

In addition to sharing police bodycam footage from the deadly incident, police also for the first time on Thursday showed surveillance video of what they said were two robberies in the same neighborhood on June 12 and 27. Police did not say if Mway was involved in either of the alleged robberies.

Mway, who came to the U.S. from Myanmar with his family as Karen refugees several years ago, was stopped, along with another young male, by Utica police officers at around 10 p.m. on June 28. The department said the officers were investigating reported robberies.

Police said officers attempted to stop and frisk Mway after they said they observed an object in his sweatshirt front pocket. Mway then fled and police said he flashed what they believed to be a handgun at police during a struggle. Officer Patrick Husnay fired his gun one time and struck Mway in the upper abdomen, according to police video. The weapon carried by Mway was later found to be a pellet gun, but mimicked a .22-caliber Glock handgun, according to police.

Husnay and officers Bryce Patterson and Andrew Citriniti, who were also involved in the incident, have been placed on paid administrative. Thursday's statement didn't address their current status. 

Berger said the state attorney general is investigating if laws were followed and if the shooting was justified, while city police are conducting their own investigation to determine if its department's procedures were properly followed.