His brother complained that revealing that information was an attempt to blame his brother for getting killed.
"No matter what he did on the 16th and the 17th doesn't determine what happened on the 18th," he said. "All of these things are irrelevant."
"Stephon, it was like he was killed again," he continued. "Literally, she ran his name through the dirt."
Schubert, who called the shooting a tragedy, repeatedly apologized for raising the personal details during her hourlong presentation on Saturday.
"I can't tell ultimately what was going on in his mind," she said. "He was in a state of despair and he was impaired, and that may have affected his judgment."
Stevante Clark said his family plans to mark the upcoming anniversary of his brother's death with a weekend honoring his life that will begin on March 15 and conclude on March 18. He called on the community to remain peaceful.
"Everything that's peaceful that's done, we support it," he said, adding the family's ultimate goal is to change laws to limit police shootings and to hold police departments more accountable.
Police officials and Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg have said that since the shooting the department has increased training, limited foot pursuits like those in the Clark case and committed to quickly releasing videos of officer-involved shootings.
Clark said he appreciates all of that.
"But at the end of the day, Stephon is not here with us," he said.