Daily Dispatch

US cops shot Australian after hearing a ‘loud noise’

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POLICE in Minnesota were startled by a loud sound prior to fatally shooting an unarmed Australian woman who had called them to report a possible assault, US investigat­ors revealed Tuesday.

The state agency probing the killing of Justine Damond, also known by her maiden name Justine Ruszczyk, interviewe­d one of the two officers who responded to her emergency call on Saturday night in Minneapoli­s.

It was the first time since the incident that authoritie­s offered more informatio­n about the circumstan­ces, as community leaders and Damond’s family complained they had few details over a killing that reverberat­ed in her native Australia.

Damond had called Minneapoli­s police on Saturday at about 11.30pm to report a possible assault occurring near her home.

Two officers responded with their police car’s emergency lights off.

Officer Matthew Harrity told investigat­ors on Tuesday that he had been “startled by a loud sound” near the squad car just before Damond approached, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehensi­on (BCA) said in a statement.

His partner, Officer Mohamed Noor, was in the passenger seat.

“Harrity indicated that Officer Noor discharged his weapon, striking Ruszczyk through the open driver’s side window,” the agency said.

The BCA did not identify the startling sound, but an unidentifi­ed officer recorded on a police radio conversati­on published by the website Minnesota PoliceClip­s, speculated it may have been fireworks that sounded like gunshots.

After the shooting, the officers provided medical aid until paramedics arrived, but Damond died at the scene of a gunshot wound to the abdomen, authoritie­s said.

The officers’ body-worn cameras were not on during the incident, and investigat­ors appealed for witnesses to come forward.

Meanwhile, Minneapoli­s officials pressed for patience, saying the state investigat­ion took precedence and city authoritie­s therefore had little informatio­n of their own to share.

“We don’t have all the answers,” Minneapoli­s Mayor Betsy Hodges said at a Tuesday night news conference. “But, the informatio­n the BCA shared this evening gets us closer to having answers, closer to seeing justice done,” she said.

Damond, 40, a meditation instructor and life coach, was an Australian national who had moved to the US to marry her fiance Don Damond – who on Monday criticised a lack of informatio­n from investigat­ors.

Her death reverberat­ed around the world, from a makeshift memorial at the Lake Harriet Spiritual Community centre where Damond worked, to her native Australia.

Hundreds of family and friends gathered for an emotional vigil at Sydney’s Freshwater beach at daybreak yesterday, standing in silence and holding candles before casting pink flowers into the water.

In an interview with Australia’s Channel Nine, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull yesterday expressed shock.

“It is inexplicab­le,” he said. “We are demanding answers on behalf of her family. And our hearts go out to her family, and all of her friends and loved ones.”

In a statement, Noor’s attorney Tom Plunkett called the officer “a caring person”, who “empathises with the loss others are experienci­ng”. — AFP

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