The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Still no verdict in Olsen murder trial after 4 days of deliberati­ons

- By Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com and Bill Rankin brankin@ajc.com

After four days of deliberati­ons, jurors in the murder trial of former DeKalb County police officer Robert “Chip” Olsen have yet to render a verdict. And they may not arrive at one before the end of the week.

“Is Monday a holiday?” asked one of the jurors.

Monday, Columbus Day, is not a state holiday, at least not in Georgia. Whether the Olsen jury will still be deliberati­ng then could depend on Judge LaTisha Dear Jackson’s decision to grant the state’s request to issue an Allen charge, an instructio­n meant to discourage deadlocks. She said she’ll rule on that this morning.

“It’s the most coercive instructio­n there is to try to get the jury to render verdicts on every count,” said Atlanta lawyer Esther Panitch, who has been following the trial.

But that doesn’t mean the jury will eventually reach an agreement on all charges.

“It sounds like they’re being very methodical,” said lead defense attorney Don Samuel, responding to the jury’s request to end deliberati­ons a little early. He said the defense team will offer their take on the Allen charge today.

Typically the defense opposes the imposition of an Allen charge.

Presumably the 7-woman, 5-man panel is hung up on at least one of the two felony murder counts. If convicted on just one of those charges, Olsen, 57, faces a mandatory sentence of life in prison.

Olsen is charged in the March 2015 shooting of Anthony Hill, a mentally ill Afghanista­n war veteran who had stripped naked after skipping his meds. Hill, 26, was shot as he approached Olsen, ignoring commands to stop. Hill was unarmed.

Earlier Thursday, the jury asked Dear Jackson if their decisions on some of the six counts against Olsen would be invalidate­d if they couldn’t come to a conclusion on others.

The judge informed them that verdicts are not required on every count. That would result in a partial mistrial.

Is such an outcome inevitable for the Olsen trial?

Possibly, but it’s still too early to tell. The jury in the trial of Claud “Tex” McIver — the prominent Atlanta attorney charged with intentiona­lly shooting his wife, Diane, as they rode in their SUV near Piedmont Park in September 2016 — took 27 hours to reach a verdict.

Convention­al wisdom states that defendants generally benefit from extended deliberati­ons. But McIver was found guilty of felony murder.

 ?? BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM ?? Robert “Chip” Olsen (center) leaves the courtroom with his attorneys Thursday after court convened to answer a jury question during the fourth day of deliberati­ons in his murder trial.
BOB ANDRES / ROBERT.ANDRES@AJC.COM Robert “Chip” Olsen (center) leaves the courtroom with his attorneys Thursday after court convened to answer a jury question during the fourth day of deliberati­ons in his murder trial.

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