Las Vegas Review-Journal

Jury’s decision could come to video

Attorneys to make final arguments in officer trial

- By Don Babwin and Michael Tarm The Associated Press

CHICAGO — From the moment Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke was charged with first-degree murder in the 2014 shooting of Laquan Mcdonald, the case has centered on the video.

As attorneys prepare to make their final arguments on Thursday, the question is what jurors will think after watching the video repeatedly over the course of the three-week trial. What about the testimony from Van Dyke and his partner that night that the squad car and nearby surveillan­ce cameras didn’t capture their experience?

The video of the white police officer shooting the black teenager 16 times was key in charges being brought against Van Dyke in November 2015, more than a year after Mcdonald’s death. Official police accounts of the Oct. 20, 2014, shooting described Mcdonald as lunging toward officers with the knife. The video shows Van Dyke stepping forward and opening fire as Mcdonald walks at an angle away from him, a small knife in his right hand, which hangs at his side. Mcdonald spins and crumples to the ground. The barrage of gunfire continues, smoke coming off of his prone body.

Testimony in the trial concluded Wednesday, with defense attorneys rolling out and entering into evidence a squad car tire that McDonald punctured with his knife moments before Van Dyke arrived. Prosecutor­s read into the record what Van Dyke told Chicago police Detective David March shortly after the shooting, including a statement that Van Dyke made that Mcdonald had raised a knife at him and kept pointing at him even after he was on the ground — both things not shown on the video.

That video will almost certainly be played again Thursday. Prosecutor­s also will likely stress that none of the nearly dozen other officers who encountere­d Mcdonald after police responded to a report of someone breaking into vehicles opened fire.

If defense attorneys show the video, it will be to remind the jurors that as an erratic Mcdonald walked down the middle of a street, the knife flashing in his right hand, one sudden movement and he could have been upon the officer with a deadly weapon.

 ?? John J. Kim ?? The Associated Press Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke, right, stands in front of the bench with attorneys during his first-degree murder trial in the shooting death of Laquan Mcdonald at the Leighton Criminal Court Building Wednesday in Chicago.
John J. Kim The Associated Press Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke, right, stands in front of the bench with attorneys during his first-degree murder trial in the shooting death of Laquan Mcdonald at the Leighton Criminal Court Building Wednesday in Chicago.

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