Bangkok Post

Wright’s death ‘an accident’

Minnesota Police say officer fired real gun by mistake, write Shawn Hubler and

- Jeremy White

The chief of police for Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, where Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old black man, was fatally shot by a white officer on Sunday, said on Monday that the shooting was an accident. The officer, Kimberly A Potter, a 26-year veteran of the force, had intended to deploy her Taser, the chief said at a news conference, but had shot her service pistol instead.

Tasers look and feel different from pistols in a number of ways, and most police forces — including Brooklyn Center’s — have standard precaution­s and protocols in place to prevent the sort of mix-up that can be deadly.

Tasers are often produced in bright colours, or with neon accents, to distinguis­h them from pistols. The Brooklyn Center Police Department manual cites the Glock 17, 19 and 26 as standard-issue for the department. All three pistol models weigh significan­tly more than a typical Taser. Glocks also have a trigger safety that can be felt when touching the trigger. Tasers do not. Grips on Tasers are typically different from those of firearms, as well, though they may feel similar because both are usually made of a similar type of polymer.

“If you train enough, you should be able to tell,” said Scott A DeFoe, a retired sergeant with the Los Angeles Police Department.

Wright was shot during a traffic stop less than 16 kilometres from the courtroom where the trial of Derek Chauvin, the Minneapoli­s police officer charged with murdering George Floyd last May, is being held. The police in suburban Brooklyn Center said Wright was initially stopped for driving a vehicle without current registrati­on, and then detained after they determined that a warrant for his arrest had been issued, stemming from a missed hearing on a misdemeano­ur gun charge.

A clip of Ms Potter’s body camera video released by the Brooklyn Center Police Department shows the police trying to handcuff Wright before he lurches suddenly back into his car. The video then shows Ms Potter’s arm aiming a weapon as her voice shouts “Taser! Taser! Taser!” on the audio.

She fires one round, Wright groans in pain and Ms Potter can then be heard to cry, “Holy shit, I just shot him.”

Brooklyn Center Police Department protocol dictates that officers wear their guns on their dominant side and Tasers on the opposite side of their bodies, to reduce the risk that they will confuse the two weapons.

In most cases in which an officer grabs a pistol instead of a Taser, the confusion occurs under particular circumstan­ces, said Ed Obayashi, an expert in the use of police force and a California deputy sheriff with a legal practice. It can happen when officers carry both weapons on the same side of their body, he said, or when they holster their stun guns on the opposite side of their body in such a way that it is easier for them to reach across their bodies with a dominant hand and cross-draw.

In both cases, he said, the officer can become accustomed to using the same hand to draw either weapon, a habit that can make it harder to tell one from the other in highpressu­re situations when muscle memory and instinct kick in.

Body-camera footage from the scene of Wright’s killing does not show how Ms Potter carried her weapons. But Mr Obayashi said it does show her fellow officer with his gun on one side of his body and his Taser on the other side, holstered so that either weapon could easily be grabbed by his dominant hand.

The Brooklyn Police Department policy manual states that “all Taser devices shall be clearly and distinctly marked to differenti­ate them from the duty weapon and any other device”. The manual also says that “officers should not hold both a firearm and the Taser device at the same time”.

It appears that several aspects of how Ms Potter handled her weapons may have violated the protocol laid out in the manual, even if she had drawn her Taser and not her firearm.

The manual advises that the device should not be used against people “whose position or activity may result in collateral injury” — including people who are “operating vehicles”. Wright was sitting in the driver’s seat when Ms Potter fired, and his car travelled several blocks after he was shot.

The manual also says that “reasonable efforts should be made to target lower centre mass and avoid the head, neck, chest and groin” if an officer is using a Taser. Wright died of a gunshot wound to his chest, according to the Hennepin County medical examiner.

There have been other instances of a police officer intending to deploy a Taser and dischargin­g a firearm instead, though such errors are not common.

In 2018, a rookie Kansas police officer mistakenly shot a man who was fighting with a fellow officer. In 2019, a police officer in Pennsylvan­ia shouted “Taser!” before shooting an unarmed man in the torso. And in 2015, a former Oklahoma reserve deputy killed an unarmed man when he mistook his handgun for a stun gun.

Greg Meyer, a retired captain in the Los Angeles Police Department and a use-of-force expert, documented nine similar instances from 2001-09 in a 2012 article published in a monthly law journal produced by Americans for Effective Law Enforcemen­t, a nonprofit.

In six of the nine cases cited in the article, the officers carried both weapons on the same, “strong-hand” side of their bodies. In the other three, however, the officers carried the weapons on opposite hips with the Taser positioned so that they could cross-draw it, the article said.

In most cases, there has been little or no jail time for officers discipline­d or tried for wounding or killing someone in situations in which they said they had mistaken a gun for a Taser.

In the Pennsylvan­ia case, for example, the district attorney said the officer “did not possess the criminal mental state required to be guilty of a crime under state law”.

 ??  ?? Wright: Killed during traffic stop
Wright: Killed during traffic stop

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