CLEVELAND, Ohio - On this video, taken from a security camera outside Cudell Recreation Center, you can see 12-year-old Tamir Rice waving a gun.

This was among the video and audio recordings that Cleveland Police released at a press conference Wednesday.

"The family initially did not want the video released but after reviewing it and consultation with their representatives, they decided that they would express the wish to us to have it released," said Chief Calvin Williams, Cleveland Police.

There's the 9-1-1 call from a person, who is concerned about the boy waving the gun, but says it may not be real:

"There's a guy with a pistol, you know it's probably fake. He's pointing it at everybody. The guy keeps pulling it in and out of his pants, it's probably fake, but you know it's scaring the s*** out of me."

Then the recording from the police dispatcher:

"Hey, we have a code one at Cudell, everybody is tied up with priorities. Guy seen on the swings, pointing a gun at people. In the park, by the youth center, there's a black male sitting on the swings. He's wearing a camouflage hat, a gray jacket with black sleeves. Say he keeps pulling a gun out of pants and pointing it at people."

The surveillance video also shows the moment the police cruiser drives up, on the grass, right near Rice.

26-year-old officer Timothy Loehman was the shooter.

46-year-old Frank Garmback was the other officer with him.

Police said Loehman repeated three times for Rice to put his hands up.

Rice is hidden from view, next to the cruiser, when the shooting happens.

Rice had been holding an air-soft gun, that did not have the orange marking on it that would have distinguished it from a real hand gun.

Both Loehman and Garmback are on administrative leave.

In the latest statement from Rice's parents, they ask the community to remain calm, to protest peacefully and responsibly. They also thank Cleveland police for the video and they await the results of their investigation.

But the family also says the video distinctly shows the officers reacted quickly and they hope that the police department and county prosecutor's office will thoroughly examine the events from November 22.