Albuquerque Journal

Questions dog Dallas man’s death

Officer says she thought victim was in her apartment

- BY RYAN TARINELLI

DALLAS — A white Dallas police officer who said she mistook a black neighbor’s apartment for her own fatally shot that person, and authoritie­s are seeking manslaught­er charges, police said Friday.

It was not clear what the officer may have said to 26-year-old Botham Jean after entering his home late Thursday. But given what investigat­ors currently know about the case, they decided to pursue a manslaught­er case, police said.

“Right now, there are more questions than we have answers,” Police Chief U. Renee Hall told a news conference. She said she spoke to Jean’s sister to express condolence­s to the family.

It was also unclear if the officer was in custody. Hall said she did not know the whereabout­s of the officer, whose name was not released.

According to police, the officer returned home in her uniform after her shift. She called dispatch to report that she had shot a man, and she later told the officers who responded that she believed the victim’s apartment was her own when she entered it.The responding officers administer­ed first aid to Jean, a native of the Caribbean country of St. Lucia who attended college in Arkansas and worked for accounting and consulting firm PwC. Jean was taken to a hospital, where he died.

Hall said the officer’s blood was drawn to be tested for drugs and alcohol. She declined to speculate as to whether fatigue or other factors, including race, may have factored into the shooting. She also said the Texas Rangers will conduct an independen­t investigat­ion.

Jean grew up in St. Lucia and attended Harding University in Searcy, Arkansas, where he majored in accounting and informatio­n systems and often led campus worship services before graduating in 2016, the school said in a statement. That July, he went to work for PwC in risk assurance. The company in a statement that it was “simply heartbroke­n to hear of his death.”

Family and friends described Jean as a devout Christian and a talented singer. His uncle Ignatius Jean said the slaying left relatives looking for answers.

“You want to think it’s fiction … and you have to grapple with the reality,” he said.

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