The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Jury pool questioned for trial of deputy in child’s shooting

- By Michael Kunzelman

The head of the Louisiana State Police called it the most disturbing thing he has seen: a 6-year-old autistic boy’s lifeless body, strapped into the front seat of a car riddled with bullets fired by two law enforcemen­t officers.

Video from a police officer’s body camera captured the burst of gunfire and gruesome aftermath of the shooting that killed Jeremy Mardis and critically wounded his father during a November 2015 traffic stop. The footage also showed the father with his hands raised inside his car as the deputy city marshals opened fire. At least four of their 18 shots tore into Jeremy.

“He didn’t deserve to die like that,” State Police Col. Mike Edmonson said as he announced the deputies’ arrests in the days after the shooting.

Sixteen months later, jury selection began Monday in Marksville the trial of Derrick Stafford, one of the two deputies charged with second-degree murder in the first-grader’s death. An initial 300 jurors were summoned to court, and questionin­g suggests many have seen the video.

Prosecutor­s say this bodycam video proves Jeremy’s unarmed father, Christophe­r Few, didn’t pose a threat to the deputies as they fired on his car from a safe distance.

Defense attorneys argue that Stafford and the other deputy, Norris Greenhouse Jr., acted in self-defense. They claim Few drove recklessly as he led deputies on a 2-mile chase and then rammed into Greenhouse’s vehicle as he exited it, before he and Stafford opened fire.

A State Police detective has testified there isn’t any physical evidence of Few’s car colliding with Greenhouse’s vehicle, but couldn’t rule that out as a possibilit­y.

Jonathan Goins, one of Stafford’s attorneys, said his client feared for his life when he fired his semi-automatic pistol.

“My client wanted to go home and be with his family that night, just like any officer wants to go home and be with their family,” Goins said.

The shooting rocked Marksville and exposed tensions between law enforcemen­t and residents of the central Louisiana town, which has a population of roughly 5,500.

“It’s been emotional. It’s been divisive,” said District Attorney Charles Riddle, who recused himself from the case because one of his top assistant prosecutor­s is Greenhouse’s father. “Law enforcemen­t has taken some hits, but we have tried to address the complaints.”

Stafford, a Marksville police lieutenant, and Greenhouse, a former Marksville police officer, were moonlighti­ng on the night of the shooting. Greenhouse awaits a separate trial on the same charges.

Marksville’s deputy city marshals are part-timers who normally serve court papers, but they had been stopping cars and writing traffic tickets for months before the shooting.

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