The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY RULING CLEARS PATH FOR EX-OFFICER’S MURDER TRIAL

Former DeKalb police officer will face trial in death of unarmed vet.

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com

A precedent shattering prosecutio­n of a former DeKalb County officer in the fatal shooting an unarmed veteran will resume following a ruling by the Georgia Supreme Court.

At issue: Whether prosecutor­s violated the principle of grand jury secrecy when they secured indictment­s against Robert Olsen — the first against a law enforcemen­t officer in Georgia in at least five years.

Olsen’s attorney, Don Samuel, argued that by allowing unauthoriz­ed personnel with no connection to the case into the proceeding­s, then-DeKalb District Attorney Robert James put the former officer at a disadvanta­ge.

But the Supreme Court, in an unanimous decision, found “no unlawful conduct ... and no prejudice is demonstrat­ed by the manner in which the prosecutor conducted the evidentiar­y stage

of the grand jury proceeding­s,” wrote Justice Robert Benham.

It’s been 31 months since Olsen shot Anthony Hill, a veteran of the Afghanista­n War who had been medically discharged from the U.S. Air Force after being diagnosed with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and bi-polar disorder. Hill, according to family and friends, was having trouble adjusting to his medication, which they blame for his actions on March 9, 2015.

Olsen arrived at the Chamblee apartment complex where Hill lived after neighbors called 911 reporting his strange behavior. Hill had climbed down from his second-story apartment nude and was roaming through the complex.

After watching for several moments in a marked police car, Olsen got out of the vehicle when he noticed Hill approachin­g him. Olsen told him to stop but Hill continued approachin­g the officer, who claimed he felt his safety was threatened.

Prosecutor­s say Hill had his hands in the air as he moved toward the officer, who was armed with pepper spray and a Taser. He chose instead to shoot Hill twice in torso from about five feet away.

Olsen was charged in Jan. 2016

with felony murder, aggravated assault, violation of oath of office and making a false statement. The state alleges Olsen told another officer at the scene that Hill had assaulted him, a claim he later recanted.

Hill had been one of 184 fatal police shootings in Georgia since 2010 documented in an Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on/Channel 2 Action News investigat­ion that reviewed the victims and the circumstan­ces surroundin­g each case. Of those 184 cases, Olsen was the first to face prosecutio­n.

The challenges in securing an indictment against an officer centered on the grand jury process which allowed officers the unique privilege of observing the entire hearing and testifying without cross-examinatio­n. Georgia lawmakers later passed a bill allowing the officer in the grand jury room only to give testimony. And they can now face questions from prosecutor­s or jurors.

But Samuel said that the deck was unfairly stacked against his client.

“Grand jurors were outnumbere­d by non-grand jurors at times,” Samuel said during a Sept. 2016 hearing. But the Supreme Court was not convinced that the presence of extraneous staff “violated the need for grand jury secrecy or compromise­d the grand jury’s independen­ce from outside influences.”

In a statement sent to The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, Samuel blasted the deci- sion, saying it “enshrines the notion that the grand jury is nothing more than a tool of the prosecutio­n that enhances its advantage in a criminal prosecutio­n. ”The constituti­onal ‘right’ to a grand jury is no longer a ‘right’ at all,” he said.

DeKalb District Attorney Sherry Boston said she expects the case to be returned to Superior Court in about 10 days. ”The trial court will subsequent­ly schedule dates for upcoming proceeding­s at its discretion,” Boston said in a statement, adding she plans to request the earliest trial date available.

“We look forward to proceeding expeditiou­sly,” she said.

 ??  ?? Anthony Hill (left) was shot by Robert Olsen (right) on March 9, 2015.
Anthony Hill (left) was shot by Robert Olsen (right) on March 9, 2015.
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