Los Angeles Times

Ex-cop indicted in Dallas death

Amber Guyger is charged with murder in the shooting of her unarmed black neighbor this summer.

- Associated press

DALLAS — A grand jury indicted a former Dallas police officer Friday on a murder charge in the death of her unarmed black neighbor, whom she says she shot after mistakenly entering his apartment, thinking it was her own.

Amber Guyger was arrested on a manslaught­er charge three days after the Sept. 6 shooting of her 26year-old neighbor, Botham Jean, a native of the Caribbean island nation of St. Lucia who attended college in Arkansas and had been working in Dallas for the accounting and consulting firm PwC.

Guyger told investigat­ors that after finishing her shift, she returned home in uniform and parked on the fourth floor of her apartment complex’s garage, rather than the third floor, where her unit was located, according to a Texas Rangers affidavit.

She said she got to what she thought was her apartment — Jean’s was directly above hers — and found the door ajar. She opened it to find a figure standing in the darkness. She said she pulled her gun and fired twice after the person ignored her commands.

Guyger has since been fired from the department, and Jean’s family has filed a lawsuit against her and the city of Dallas. The federal suit argues that Guyger used excessive force in the shooting and that the department did not give her adequate training.

The circumstan­ces of the shooting sparked outrage and led many to question Guyger’s account. Critics, including Jean’s family, also wondered why it took three days for Guyger to be charged, why she wasn’t taken into custody immediatel­y after the shooting and whether race played a factor in her decision to use deadly force.

Responding to criticism that the original manslaught­er charge was too lenient, Dallas County Dist. Atty. Faith Johnson said the grand jury could decide on the more serious charge of murder, which it did.

Jean’s killing thrust Dallas into the national conversati­on on the intersecti­on of race and law enforcemen­t, a dialogue revived by the highprofil­e trials of officers charged with murder in police shootings.

In October, white Chicago Officer Jason Van Dyke was found guilty of seconddegr­ee murder in the 2014 on-duty shooting of black teenager Laquan McDonald. Van Dyke shot McDonald 16 times.

And in August, former Dallas-area Officer Roy Oliver, who is white, was convicted of murder after firing into a car filled with black teenagers leaving a party in 2017 and fatally wounding 15year-old Jordan Edwards.

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