Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Judge dismisses manslaught­er charge against Florida deputy

- By Curt Anderson

FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. >> A judge on Wednesday dismissed a manslaught­er charge against a Florida deputy who claimed selfdefens­e in the 2013 fatal shooting of a 33-year-old black man carrying what turned out to be an air rifle.

Circuit Judge Michael Usan ruled in favor of suspended Deputy Peter Peraza of the Broward Sheriff’s Office under Florida’s “Stand Your Ground” selfdefens­e law that eliminates a requiremen­t to retreat — for civilians and law enforcemen­t officers, the judge said — when facing a dire threat.

The now-dismissed manslaught­er charge carries a potential 30-year prison sentence. Prosecutor­s immediatel­y said the decision will be appealed.

The ruling was issued the same day all remaining charges were dropped against Baltimore police officers in the death of Freddie Gray, who was injured while being transporte­d in a police van. And it comes in the midst of a tense national discussion of policing and race, including the fatal shootings of officers in Dallas and Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and recent police killings of black men in Baton Rouge and Minnesota.

Peraza, 37, who identifies himself as a white Hispanic, testified during a hearing that Jermaine McBean initially refused commands from him and other deputies to drop the authenticl­ooking weapon and then turned and pointed it toward the deputies in July 2013. Peraza fired three shots, killing him.

“I’ve never been so scared in my life,” Peraza testified.

In his 36-page order, the judge called the shooting a “tragedy” and noted the ongoing national debate involving the shootings by police officers of black people and the hostility and threats sometimes directed at police.

But Usan said that debate has “no place in this courtroom concerning this case” and said Peraza’s use of deadly force was justified under Florida law.

“This case involves the tragic death of one man and the liberty of another. To allow the conflictin­g agenda of supporters of either side to invade this legal process would be a far greater injustice,” he said.

Peraza attorney Eric Schwartzre­ich praised the decision and said the deputy should never have been charged. “All police officers should feel confident that, in this dangerous day and age, they can now protect and serve without fear of being indicted,” said Schwartzre­ich, who represents Peraza along with attorney Anthony Bruno.

“Regardless, this case is a tragedy all around. This case was never about race; it was about self-defense.”

McBean family attorney David Schoen said he will continue to pursue a federal civil rights lawsuit against the sheriff’s office over the shooting.

“It is (a) complete travesty and miscarriag­e of justice,” Schoen said of the ruling. “It should have been impossible for any judge to take this case away from a jury.”

A spokesman for State Attorney Michael Satz said in an email that the ruling will be appealed. Satz’s office added in a statement that the “Stand Your Ground” defense should not apply in a law enforcemen­t case.

“While there is conflictin­g evidence, we feel a jury should resolve those conflicts. We believe that the facts of the case do not support that this was a justifiabl­e shooting,” the statement said.

Amid national debate over police tactics involving minorities, Peraza was the first Florida law enforcemen­t officer in three decades charged with a crime for an on-duty shooting.

On June 1, fired Palm Beach Gardens officer Nouman Raja was charged with manslaught­er and attempted first-degree murder for killing stranded motorist and musician Corey Jones, who was black, while Jones waited for a tow truck. Raja, of South Asian descent, has pleaded not guilty.

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