The Commercial Appeal

Conn. trooper charged with manslaught­er

- Dave Collins

HARTFORD, Conn. – A Connecticu­t state trooper who fired seven gunshots into a car and killed a man in 2020 after a high-speed chase has been charged with manslaught­er after a more than two-year investigat­ion found the shooting not to be justified, officials said Wednesday.

Trooper Brian North turned himself in to the state inspector general at the state police barracks in Bethany on Tuesday evening, state police said. Officials said North was released after posting $50,000 bail, was placed on paid administra­tive leave and his police powers were suspended.

North fatally shot 19-year-old Mubarak Soulemane in January 2020 as Soulemane sat in the driver’s seat of a car in West Haven, where the chase ended and police boxed in the car.

Soulemane’s family, the NAACP and other groups said North, who is white, should not have shot Soulemane, who was Black, because police had him surrounded and he could not get away. Soulemane had a knife, but police should have attempted to deescalate the situation, they said.

“The family of Mubarak Soulemane is very happy that, after 2+ years, Trooper Brian North, who murdered Mubarak in West Haven in January 2020, may be brought to justice,” Mark Arons, a lawyer for Soulemane’s family, said in a statement. “It’s a long road ahead. But this is a good day.”

North did not return an email seeking comment, and a message was left at a phone listing for him. A message also was sent to his lawyer, Jeffrey Ment. North is scheduled to be arraigned in Milford Superior Court on May 3.

In a report released Wednesday morning, Inspector General Robert Devlin’s office said the shooting was not justified.

“At the time Trooper North fired his weapon, neither he nor any other person was in imminent danger of serious injury or death from a knife attack at the hands of Soulemane,” the report said. “Further, any belief that persons were in such danger was not reasonable.”

The report also includes a lengthy statement by North on the shooting. He said Soulemane was “holding the knife in an aggressive manner” and appeared to be preparing to attack other officers who were outside the car.

“Based on these circumstan­ces, I believed that (the other officers) were at imminent risk of serious physical injury or death, and could have been stabbed in the neck or face as they attempted to enter the vehicle and remove the suspect. As a result, I discharged my duty firearm to eliminate the threat.”

The Connecticu­t State Police Union said in a statement that it was disappoint­ed the inspector general’s office, which investigat­es police use of deadly force, decided to prosecute North. The union defended North’s actions.

The union said North “was forced to make a split-second decision during these dangerous and rapidly evolving circumstan­ces.”

On the day of the shooting, Soulemane, whose mental health appeared to have deteriorat­ed in the days before he was killed, tried unsuccessf­ully to steal a cellphone from a store in Norwalk and fled in a Lyft car he summoned, Devlin’s report said.

 ?? CONNECTICU­T STATE POLICE VIA AP FILE ?? This Jan. 15, 2020, dashboard camera still shows Trooper Brian North after fatally shooting Mubarak Soulemane.
CONNECTICU­T STATE POLICE VIA AP FILE This Jan. 15, 2020, dashboard camera still shows Trooper Brian North after fatally shooting Mubarak Soulemane.

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