Texarkana Gazette

Tulsa shooting

Officer’s lawyer: Jury should hear about auditory exclusion

- By Sean Murphy

OKLAHOMA CITY—A lawyer for a white Oklahoma police officer charged in an unarmed black man’s death says she was so hyper-focused on the situation that she didn’t hear other officers arrive on the scene or even the deadly gunshot she fired.

Tulsa officer Betty Shelby, who is expected to plead not guilty to first-degree manslaught­er at her arraignmen­t on Friday, experience­d what is commonly called “auditory exclusion,” a condition in which people in high-stress situations often don’t hear sounds around them, said her attorney, Scott Wood.

“She didn’t hear the gunshot, didn’t hear the sirens coming up behind her just prior to the shot,” Wood said Thursday. “And it’s not only a common phenomenon described in literature, but it’s the No. 1 perceptual distortion by people I have represente­d who have been involved in shootings—diminished sound or complete auditory exclusion.”

He said that while Shelby’s defense won’t hinge on whether she was aware of other officers when she shot 40-year-old Terence Crutcher on Sept. 16, it would be important for jurors to know.

“It’s just one of the many facts that have happened, and I don’t think our defense turns on whether or not she knew they were there,” Wood said.

Auditory exclusion is commonly reported by officers who fire their weapons, said David Klinger, a professor of criminolog­y and criminal justice at the University of Missouri-St. Louis.

Klinger, a former Los Angeles police officer who fatally shot a suspect just four months into the job, interviewe­d 80 law enforcemen­t officers involved in 113 separate cases where they shot citizens. Diminished sound was officers’ most commonly experience­d perceptual distortion, reported in 82 percent of the cases either before or after the shooting, or in some cases both, his study shows.

“Other researcher­s have documented the phenomenon of muted sound or full auditory exclusion where you don’t hear anything in a variety of circumstan­ces outside of policing,” Klinger said.

Other distortion­s include tunnel vision and altered perception of time, in which situations are experience­d in slow motion.

Prosecutor­s allege in court documents that Shelby “reacted unreasonab­ly” by escalating the situation with Crutcher, who she encountere­d after coming across his vehicle abandoned in the middle of a north Tulsa street. Videos from a police helicopter and a dashboard camera of the shooting and its aftermath showed Crutcher, who was unarmed, walking away from Shelby with his arms in the air, but the footage does not offer a clear view of when Shelby fired the single shot.

Shelby told investigat­ors Crutcher refused repeated requests to stop and get on his knees and that she feared for her life and thought Crutcher was going to kill her, according to an affidavit filed with the manslaught­er charge.

Another officer, who arrived on the scene after Shelby had already drawn her firearm, used a stun gun on Crutcher, but Wood said Shelby never even realized that officer was there until after she fired the deadly shot.

Despite the research, Lori Brown, a professor of sociology at Meredith College in Raleigh, North Carolina, said she believes it’s dangerous to think a police officer would use auditory exclusion as a possible explanatio­n for killing a man who was not doing anything aggressive.

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