The Oklahoman

Fatal shooting removed from ex-officer's record

- BY JUSTIN JUOZAPAVIC­IUS

TULSA — The firstdegre­e manslaught­er case brought against a white former Oklahoma police officer who was acquitted in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black man will be removed from her record after she asked to have it expunged, a judge ruled Wednesday.

District Judge William LaFortune also ordered all documents involving former Tulsa officer Betty Jo Shelby’s case sealed and kept with the court. The case will only be accessible through a court order and can be destroyed after 10 years, according to state law. Excluding government and law enforcemen­t, which would have access to the record because Shelby would likely disclose it on job applicatio­ns, agencies won’t be able to find the case in a background search, said Shelby’s defense attorney, Shannon McMurray.

“This crime does not exist for employment applicatio­n purposes,” McMurray said Wednesday. She said it was important for Shelby “to have that smear on her name removed from public view.”

“Like any other citizen who is acquitted, Betty Jo Shelby was entitled to have her record sealed and expunged,” the attorney said. “Betty ... continues to work to try and serve her community and prays for everyone’s continued healing.”

A spokeswoma­n for the district attorney declined to comment Wednesday.

Shelby petitioned in August to have her record expunged after jurors acquitted her three months earlier in the September 2016 killing of 40-yearold Terence Crutcher.

She was on patrol last year when she encountere­d Crutcher, whose SUV was stopped in the middle of the street. Shelby testified at trial that she was scared because Crutcher appeared to be under the influence of drugs, didn’t obey her commands and looked like he was reaching inside his vehicle.

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