The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

City braces again for police shooting trial

- By Dan Sewell

CINCINNATI » Prosecutor­s, attorneys and people across the Cincinnati region have had six months to analyze and debate the hung jury result in the murder trial of a white police officer charged with killing an unarmed black man.

They’ll soon find out whether a second trial will get a new result.

Prospectiv­e jurors will report Thursday for the retrial of ex-University of Cincinnati officer Ray Tensing in the July 19, 2015, shooting of Sam DuBose during a traffic stop.

City councilwom­an Yvette Simpson said it’s difficult to find anyone locally who’s not invested in the case in some way.

Hamilton County Judge Leslie Ghiz, who has imposed a gag order on trial participan­ts and restrictio­ns on news media coverage, said it has “huge community implicatio­ns.”

It’s among cases nationally that have focused attention on how police deal with blacks and also the challenges prosecutor­s face gaining conviction­s.

“It’s always hard to tell whenever you’re talking about these cases,” said Rodney Harris, a Cincinnati public defender. “When you look around the nation, it’s always difficult to get a resolution, just because of the nature of the case.”

In the latest example, an Oklahoma jury last week found white Tulsa officer Betty Shelby not guilty of manslaught­er. She said she shot out of fear when she killed Terence Crutcher, an unarmed black man.

Philip Stinson, a Bowling Green State University criminolog­ist who has been tracking on-duty police shooting cases dating to 2005, said at least 81 officers across the country have been charged with murder or manslaught­er in on-duty shootings in that time. Of those, 29 were convicted, 15 by juries, with 32 acquitted and the rest pending. Many other police shootings never result in charges because authoritie­s conclude they were justified.

Ohio Fraternal Order of Police President Jay McDonald has been critical of the decision to try Tensing a second time, saying he, as other officers have to do, made “a life-or-death judgment call in the matter of a split second.” McDonald said recently: “We will stand by Officer Tensing.”

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