Yuma Sun

Video of police shooting wasn’t enough to convict

-

MINNEAPOLI­S — The release of dashboard video in the shooting death of Philando Castile renewed anger over his death and reopened an emotional question: How could the police officer who shot him have been acquitted?

But even with the shocking squad-car footage, prosecutor­s faced a challenge because no video showed exactly what happened inside Castile’s car. That left plenty of room for reasonable doubt.

The dashboard video made public for the first time Tuesday showed events that had been described many times since Castile was killed by Officer Jeronimo Yanez nearly a year ago. For many viewers, the graphic scene of gunfire striking a black driver during a seemingly simple traffic stop served only to make last week’s verdict harder to understand. Yanez was the first of two police officers to be acquitted in a killing in less than a week. A Wisconsin jury on Wednesday found a former police officer not guilty of first-degree reckless homicide charges in the on-duty shooting of a black man last year that ignited riots in Milwaukee.

The only two jurors who have spoken publicly about the Minnesota case acknowledg­ed the impact of the video, which they saw during the trial. But they said prosecutor­s failed to prove that Yanez acted with “culpable negligence,” the legal standard needed to support a conviction for second-degree manslaught­er in Minnesota.

According to the U.S. Supreme Court, the jury would have to conclude that no reasonable officer would have acted as Yanez did under the same circumstan­ces, said local defense attorney Joe Tamburino, who was not involved in the case.

The video showed the Latino officer politely telling Castile that his brake light was out. After Castile handed over his insurance card, he calmly said, “Sir, I have to tell you, I do have a firearm on me.”

Before Castile finished that sentence, the Latino officer, who testified that he thought Castile looked like a suspect in a robbery a few days earlier, began pulling his weapon out of its holster.

With his voice initially composed, Yanez said: “OK. Don’t reach for it then,” but then the stress in his voice grew as he ordered, “Don’t pull it out” before suddenly firing seven shots into the car, which also held Castile’s girlfriend and her 4-year-old daughter.

The case came to national attention in large part because the girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, streamed the scene from the passenger seat on Facebook immediatel­y after Castile was hit.

Castile and Reynolds both told the officer that Castile was not reaching for his gun. Before he was shot, Castile said “I’m not pulling it out.” And his last words, after the shooting, were “I wasn’t reaching ...” Reynolds later said Castile was reaching for his wallet.

Taken from a distance, the dashboard video does not show what happened inside the car during the crucial seven seconds from when Castile said he had a gun to when Yanez fired his final shot.

Yanez, 29, testified that he believed he saw Castile, 32, going for his gun, and that he saw the gun itself. Prosecutor­s contended that the officer never saw the gun because it remained in Castile’s pocket until paramedics removed him from his car.

Juror Dennis Ploussard told The Associated Press that the jury favored acquittal early by a 10-2 vote. He said the panel spent a lot of time dissecting the meaning of the “culpable negligence” standard until the two holdouts eventually agreed Friday on acquittal.

Juror Bonita Schultz told Minneapoli­s television station KARE and the Star Tribune that their big question came down to the part nobody could see on the video — whether Castile went for his gun.

She said the state did not prove that Yanez was being dishonest about seeing a gun. The jury, she said, also gave a lot of credibilit­y to a use-of-force expert called by the defense who testified in detail about why he believed Yanez acted reasonably under the circumstan­ces.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States