Jamaica Gleaner

Jurors begin deliberati­ons at Chicago officer’s murder trial

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ATTORNEYS IN the trial of a white Chicago police officer charged with murder in the 2014 shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald sparred over what video of the deadly encounter actually proves yesterday just before jurors withdrew to begin deliberati­ng.

During closing arguments, prosecutor Jody Gleason pointed to dashcam video of officer Jason Van Dyke shooting McDonald 16 times as the teenager held a knife at his side. She noted that Van Dyke told detectives that McDonald raised the knife that Van Dyke backpedale­d and that McDonald tried to get up off the ground after being shot.

“None of that happened,” she said. “You’ve seen it on video. He made it up.”

But Van Dyke’s attorney, Dan Herbert, said the video, the centrepiec­e of the prosecutor’s case, doesn’t tell the whole story and is “essentiall­y meaningles­s based on the testimony” jurors heard. He pointed to testimony from Van Dyke’s partner that night, Joseph Walsh, who said he saw McDonald raise the knife, even though the video doesn’t show that. Van Dyke made similar claims on the witness stand as he told jurors that he was afraid for his life and acted according to his training.

“The video is not enough,” he said. He added: “It shows a perspectiv­e, but it’s the wrong perspectiv­e.”

Police encountere­d McDonald after a 911 call reported someone breaking into vehicles. As Van Dyke arrived, police had the 17year-old mostly surrounded on a city street. An officer with a Taser was just 25 seconds away.

 ??  ?? Defence attorney Daniel Herbert faces the jury as he begins his closing statements for Chicago police officer Jason Jason Van Dyke’s first-degree murder trial for the shooting death of Laquan McDonald, at the Leighton Criminal Court Building, yesterday, in Chicago.
Defence attorney Daniel Herbert faces the jury as he begins his closing statements for Chicago police officer Jason Jason Van Dyke’s first-degree murder trial for the shooting death of Laquan McDonald, at the Leighton Criminal Court Building, yesterday, in Chicago.

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