The Capital

Ex-Minneapoli­s cop guilty of manslaught­er

Said she confused gun for Taser before killing driver Daunte Wright

- By Amy Forliti and Scott Bauer

MINNEAPOLI­S — Jurors on Thursday convicted a suburban Minneapoli­s police officer of two manslaught­er charges in the killing of Daunte Wright, a Black motorist she shot during a traffic stop after she said she confused her gun for her Taser.

The mostly white jury deliberate­d for about four days before finding former Brooklyn Center officer Kim Potter guilty of first-degree and second-degree manslaught­er.

Potter, 49, faces about seven years in prison on the most serious count under the state’s sentencing guidelines, but prosecutor­s said they would seek a longer term.

Judge Regina Chu ordered Potter taken into custody and held without bail, and scheduled her to be sentenced on Feb. 18.

Outside the courthouse, dozens of people who had gathered erupted in cheers, hugs and tears of joy as the verdicts were read. Two men jumped up and down holding one another’s shoulders. Other people then began jumping up and down in place and chanting “Guilty, guilty, guilty!”

It was the second high-profile conviction of a police officer won this year by a team led by Attorney General Keith Ellison, including some of the same attorneys who helped convict Derek Chauvin in George Floyd’s death in the same courtroom eight months earlier.

Outside the courthouse afterward, Ellison said the verdict brought a measure of accountabi­lity for Potter but fell short of justice.

“Justice would be restoring Daunte to life and making the Wright family whole again,” Ellison said.

Ellison said he felt sympathy for Potter, who has gone from being an “esteemed member to the community” to being convicted of a serious crime.

Wright’s mother, Katie Bryant, hugged Ellison and said the verdicts triggered “every single emotion that you could imagine.”

“Today we have gotten accountabi­lity and that’s what we’ve been asking for from the beginning,” Katie Bryant said, crediting supporters for keeping up pressure.

Potter, who is white, shot and killed the 20-year-old Wright during an April 11 traffic stop in Brooklyn Center as she and other officers were trying to arrest him on an outstandin­g warrant for a weapons possession charge. The shooting happened at a time of high tension in the area, with Chauvin standing trial in nearby Minneapoli­s for Floyd’s death. Potter resigned two days later.

Jurors saw video of the shooting that was captured by police body cameras and dashcams. It showed Potter and an officer she was training, Anthony Luckey, pull over Wright for having expired license plate tags and an air freshener hanging from his rearview mirror. During the stop, Luckey discovered there was a warrant for Wright’s arrest for not appearing in court on the weapons possession charge, and he, Potter and another officer went to take Wright into custody.

Wright obeyed Luckey’s order to get out of his car, but as Luckey tried to handcuff him, Wright pulled away and got back in. As Luckey held onto Wright, Potter said “I’ll tase ya.” The video then shows Potter holding her gun in her right hand and pointing it at Wright. Again, Potter said, “I’ll tase you,” and then two seconds later: “Taser, Taser, Taser.”

One second later, she fired a single bullet into Wright’s chest.

“(Expletive)! I just shot him . ... I grabbed the wrong (expletive) gun,” Potter said. A minute later, she said: “I’m going to go to prison.”

In sometimes tearful testimony, Potter told jurors that she was “sorry it happened.” She said the traffic stop “just went chaotic” and that she shouted her warning about the Taser after she saw a look of fear on the face of Sgt. Mychal Johnson, who was leaning into the passenger-side door of Wright’s car.

She also told jurors that she doesn’t remember what she said or everything that happened after the shooting, as much of her memory of those moments “is missing.”

Potter’s lawyers argued that she made a mistake by drawing her gun instead of her Taser. But they also said she would have been justified in using deadly force if she had meant to because Johnson was at risk of being dragged.

Prosecutor­s sought to raise doubts about Potter’s testimony that she decided to act after seeing fear on Johnson’s face. Eldridge, in cross-examinatio­n, pointed out that in an interview with a defense expert, Potter said she didn’t know why she decided to draw her Taser. During her closing argument, Eldridge also replayed Potter’s body-camera video that she said never gave a clear view of Johnson’s face during the key moments.

For first-degree manslaught­er, prosecutor­s had to prove that Potter caused Wright’s death while committing a misdemeano­r — in this case, the “reckless handling or use of a firearm so as to endanger the safety of another with such force and violence that death or great bodily harm to any person was reasonably foreseeabl­e.”

The second-degree manslaught­er charge required prosecutor­s to prove that Potter caused Wright’s death “by her culpable negligence,” meaning she “caused an unreasonab­le risk and consciousl­y took a chance of causing death or great bodily harm” to Wright while using or possessing a firearm.

 ?? KEREM YUCEL/GETTY-AFP ?? Daunte Wright’s mother, Katie Bryant, center, speaks after the verdict was announced Thursday.
KEREM YUCEL/GETTY-AFP Daunte Wright’s mother, Katie Bryant, center, speaks after the verdict was announced Thursday.

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