Texarkana Gazette

Experts: Series of errors preceded Wright shooting

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The suburban Minneapoli­s police officer on trial for fatally shooting Daunte Wright has said she mistakenly used her gun when she was trying to grab a Taser during a chaotic attempt to arrest the Black motorist.

Policing experts say that regardless of Kim Potter’s intent, the fatal shooting was preceded by smaller mistakes or questionab­le decisions that added up to a dangerous situation as she was training a new officer. They also say the tragic outcome shows how important it is for veteran officers like her to have not just the savvy to train rookies, but the willingnes­s to correct them instantly in risky situations — even if it means the trainee might lose face.

“The number one priority isn’t the long-term outcome of training an officer, it’s the short term of safety,” said Brian Higgins, an adjunct professor at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice and the former chief of police and director of public safety for Bergen County, New Jersey.

“Knowing when to step in is a difficult decision sometimes, and I’m sure many times field training officers look back and go ‘Wow, I should have stepped in sooner.’”

Potter, who is white, is charged with first- and second-degree manslaught­er in the April 11 killing of Wright, who was pulled over in the Minneapoli­s suburb of Brooklyn Center for having expired license plate tags and an air freshener hanging from his rearview mirror. The jury began deliberati­ng on Monday.

Potter was training a newer officer, Anthony Luckey, that day, and she testified that if she had been alone, she “most likely” wouldn’t have pulled over Wright, who was 20 years old. She said the air freshener was trivial and that many people were having difficulty renewing their tags at that stage of the pandemic.

But Potter said Luckey wanted to make the stop and she allowed it because it’s important for trainees to have many encounters with the public.

Policing experts agree that it’s good for trainees to interact often with the public so that they learn the intangible skills the job requires. But using traffic violations as a way to check for more serious lawbreakin­g — criticized by some as pretext stops — has come under scrutiny, especially because some of these stops have led to the deaths of Black people in recent years.

Carl Lafata, a professor of criminal justice at Minnesota State University in Mankato, said such stops can erode community trust if they’re used too aggressive­ly. The Wright stop could have been a chance for Potter to teach Luckey “the art of the job,” he said.

“How do you do it in such a way that is safe, that is profession­al, that leaves that person with a good taste in their mouth?” he asked.

After Potter and Luckey discovered that Wright had an outstandin­g warrant on a weapons charge, body camera video recorded them making a plan to arrest Wright.

“I’m just going to get him out and then ‘cuff him up. I mean he’s got a warrant, so I’m going to get him cuffed up,” Luckey said.

That should have been a point at which the officers’ level of caution went up, especially in the midst of field-training a new officer, Higgins said. Learning how to correctly handcuff and control someone is a basic but critical process for police officers. If a trainee struggles to the point of risking someone’s safety, a field training officer should step in, he said.

“When an officer has made a decision to place someone under arrest, that’s when you enter in many cases the real dangerous situation,” he said. “And that’s why handcuffin­g and controllin­g the subject is critical, regardless of what the charge is.”

Ryan Getty, a professor at California State University at Sacramento who has specialize­d in developing police field training, said field training officers usually don’t allow trainees to make arrests on their own until the latter half of their training program. Although Luckey had gone through field training programs at other police department­s, he was in the second of four phases with the Brooklyn Center police force.

“Usually the (field training officer) takes over if it’s a violent arrest or warrant,” Getty said.

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