The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

WHY JUDGE RECUSED HIMSELF IN OFFICER SHOOTING CASE

Recusal could delay DeKalb County officer Robert Olsen’s case.

- By Bill Rankin brankin@ajc.com

A state judge on Mo n day recused himself from the murder case of a DeKalb County police officer, a move that could delay the start of a high-profile trial involving the death of an unarmed Afghanista­n war veteran.

DeKalb County Superior Court Judge J.P. Boulee — who has been nominated for a federal judgeship — announced his decision in a court order.

The family of Anthony Hill, who was gunned down in March 2015, was “understand­ably devastated” by the news, DeKalb County District Attorney Sherry Boston said in a statement.

The trial of DeKalb officer Robert Olsen had been set to start in two weeks. Once the case has been reassigned to a new judge, Boston said she would ask that the trial still start on Feb. 25 as had been previously scheduled.

In January 2016, Olsen became just the second Georgia police officer in at least five years to be indicted for murder in the shooting death of a civilian. (The other case that was indicted was quickly dismissed.)

It’s unclear now when Olsen’s will be tried. Boulee’s recusal came after questions arose this week regarding his sponsorshi­p of a road race hosted by Boston.

In October, Boulee donated $1,000 to the Women’s Resource Center to End Domestic Violence for its fourth annual Love Run 5K. The Feb. 23 event lists Boston as its presenter, and Boulee’s donation made him a sponsor.

A flyer recently sent out by the DA’s office includes an icon from Boulee’s campaign website listing the judge as a sponsor, and it appears just below Boston’s photo. Boston’s office is prosecutin­g the Olsen case in Boulee’s courtroom.

In his order, Boulee said judges must disqualify themselves from cases in which their impartiali­ty might reasonably be questioned.

He added that “judges should not only avoid impropriet­y, but even the appearance of impropriet­y.”

Hill, 27, was naked and unarmed when he approached Olsen outside the Heights of Chamblee Apartment Complex. Hill, an aspiring musician, had stopped taking medication­s he took for PTSD and bipolar disorder.

Don Samuel, who is representi­ng Olsen, declined on Monday to comment on the new developmen­t.

The case will be randomly reassigned to another judge, Boulee’s order said. Last year Boulee declined to grant Olsen immunity from prosecutio­n, allowing the trial to move forward.

Olsen’s legal team had argued that he was acting in self defense when he fired at Hill and therefore should not face criminal charges.

Conflicts in testimony and questions about credibilit­y played a pivotal role in his decision to reject immunity, Boulee wrote in his ruling.

Boulee said Olsen failed to show that he reasonably believed deadly force was necessary in order to avoid death or serious bodily harm to himself or anyone else.

“No evidence exists that defendant ever believed that Hill was about to kill him, and no witness testified that they thought Hill was capable of killing (Olsen),” Boulee wrote.

Olsen’s inconsiste­nt account of what happened that night could not be ignored, according to the judge.

Boulee has been nominated by President Donald Trump to fill a U.S. District Court vacancy.

On Thursday, Boulee’s nomination cleared the Senate Judiciary Committee on a unanimous vote. A vote by the full Senate has not yet been scheduled. If confirmed, Boulee would replace Bill Duffey, who retired last summer.

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