Baltimore Sun Sunday

Charges at Minn. cop’s trial offer jury a range of options

- By Steve Karnowski

MINNEAPOLI­S — When a Minneapoli­s police officer shot and killed an unarmed woman who approached his squad car after calling 911, it was catastroph­ic.

But was it murder?

Prosecutor­s have given jurors hearing the case against Mohamed Noor multiple options: second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er.

The jury will decide whether any of the counts fit what happened the night of July 15, 2017, when Noor fatally shot Justine Ruszczyk Damond just minutes after the dual citizen of the U.S. and Australia had phoned in a report of a possible sexual assault behind her home.

Defense attorneys not connected to the case see a larger and commonly used strategy to overcharge the case in a way that could make it easy for jurors to convict on the lesser manslaught­er count.

“Juries like to be King Solomon,” said Earl Gray, an attorney on the team that successful­ly defended former Minnesota Officer Jeronimo Yanez against a manslaught­er charge in the 2016 shooting death of Philando Castile during a traffic stop. “They want to split the baby and give each side half.”

Another defense attorney, Marsh Halberg, who has been sitting in on some of the testimony, said, “Obviously you would always like to get (a conviction on) the highest charge but you want to leave at the end of the day with some conviction.”

Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman was underinter­national scrutiny as he decided whether to charge Noor in Damond’s death, which had led to a police chief ’s resignatio­n. Freeman let it slip in an unguarded moment captured on video in December 2017 that he didn’t have enough evidence at that point to charge Noor, saying investigat­ors “haven’t done their job.”

When Freeman filed charges in March 2018, he said the evidence fit the legal definition­s of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er.

But Noor’s legal team and other local defense attorneys said the third-degree murder charge was an overreach. Prosecutor­s added the second-degree murder charge late last year. The presumptiv­e sentences vary from four years for the manslaught­er charge to 121⁄2 years for third-degree murder to 251⁄2 years for second-degree murder.

Neither Halberg nor Gray think the jury is likely to convict Noor of third-degree murder, because the state statute requires jurors to find that someone acted with a “depraved mind, without regard for human life,” a term so ill-defined that prosecutor­s rarely use the charge.

In Noor’s case, the prosecutio­n’s proposed jury instructio­ns specifical­ly avoid the term, and call it instead “an act eminently dangerous to others” and “performed without regard for human life committed in a reckless or wanton manner with the knowledge that someone may be killed and with a heedless disregard of that happening.”

The defense’s proposed instructio­ns do use the term “depraved mind.”

Judge Kathryn Quaintance has yet to rule.

Halberg was in court Thursday for testimony from Noor’s partner, Officer Matthew Harrity, and viewed Harrity’s body camera video as it was shown to the jury. Halberg said he was “touched by the humaneness of the officers. They held her up and lowered her to the ground. Noor is doing chest compressio­ns and they were yelling encouragem­ent to her.”

The care they showed her “really flies in the face of the depraved mind argument,” he said.

Under Minnesota law, second-degree murder involves intentiona­lly causing the death of another person, without premeditat­ion. Second-degree manslaught­er requires a finding that the defendant acted with “culpable negligence” in taking the chance of causing death or great bodily harm.

 ?? KEREM YUCEL/AGETTY-AFP ?? Former Officer Mohamed Noor, center, arrives to court with his attorneys, Peter Wold, left, and Thomas Plunkett.
KEREM YUCEL/AGETTY-AFP Former Officer Mohamed Noor, center, arrives to court with his attorneys, Peter Wold, left, and Thomas Plunkett.

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