Call & Times

Autopsy: Unarmed black man fatally shot by Tulsa officer had PCP in system

- By SARAH LARIMER

An unarmed black man who was fatally shot by a white police officer in Tulsa had the drug PCP in his system when he died last month, according to a medical examiner's report.

Terence Crutcher had "acute phencyclid­ine intoxicati­on" when he was shot by officer Betty Shelby, according to a report from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Oklahoma, which was released Tuesday.

Crutcher, 40, suffered a "penetratin­g gunshot wound of chest," states the report, which notes that some of his ribs were fractured and that a bullet fragment was recovered.

"The cause of death is penetratin­g gunshot wound of chest with musculoske­letal and visceral injuries," states the report. "The manner of death is classified as homicide."

Shelby was charged with first-degree manslaught­er in the wake of Crutcher's death. Tulsa District Attorney Steve Kunzweiler filed the charge against the five-year veteran of the Tulsa Police Department after the Sept. 16 shooting.

Shelby "reacted unreasonab­ly" and became "emotionall­y involved to the point that she overreacte­d," an affidavit stated.

If convicted, Shelby, who was released on bond after her arrest, could face a minimum four-year prison term. During a court appearance in September, one of her attorneys entered a plea of not guilty on her behalf.

Another of Shelby's attorneys, Scott Wood, said in an email Tuesday that the autopsy test result "confirms what Officer Shelby surmised the night of the shooting from Mr. Crutcher's appearance and non-compliant behavior."

"Does the fact he was under the influence of pcp in and of itself justify the shooting? Of course not," Wood wrote in an email. "It does however, help to explain his behavior, and that she was correct to consider him unpredicta­ble, and therefore a significan­t threat to her safety. One of the recognized risks of pcp is that it can lead to self destructiv­e behavior. It is another piece of the fact pattern which led to Mr. Crutcher's death."

More than 700 people have been fatally shot by police this year, according to a Washington Post database. Of those shootings, 175 involved black men.

Crutcher was shot as he stood by his stalled SUV, a death that was captured on police cameras. Footage of the incident shows Crutcher walking toward his vehicle with his hands raised, while officers trail behind. Crutcher, a father of four, lingers at a window of his car, then falls to the ground.

"Shots fired!" a female voice can be heard yelling in the footage, which doesn't contain a clear view of the instant Shelby fired the fatal shot.

Crutcher wasn't armed with a gun and one wasn't in his car, Tulsa police have said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States