The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

2 law enforcers plead not guilty to murder

Clayton officer, U.S. marshal indicted in 2016 killing of man.

- By Shaddi Abusaid shaddi.abusaid@ajc.com

Two law enforcemen­t officers facing murder charges in the 2016 death of a man who was shot nearly five dozen times pleaded not guilty Tuesday morning.

U.S. Marshal Eric Heinze, 45, and Clayton County police Officer Kristopher Hutchens, 48, were indicted last year on murder and other charges in the killing of 26-year-old Jamarion Robinson.

Robinson’s body was left riddled with bullets when a fugitive task force made up of local law enforcemen­t and federal authoritie­s tried taking him into custody at his girlfriend’s East Point apartment on July 28, 2016.

At the time, a U.S. Marshals Service spokesman said officers were attempting to serve warrants from Atlanta police and Gwinnett County police. Authoritie­s said Robinson had a gun and refused to put it down, prompting members of the federal task force to open fire inside the apartment.

The GBI, which investigat­ed the shooting, said a handgun and multiple spent rounds “believed to be associated with Robinson” were recovered from the scene. He had been shot 59 times, with 17 of those bullets exiting his body, his mother, Monteria Robinson, said.

Heinze and Hutchens, two members of the task force, were indicted in October on charges of felony murder, aggravated assault, burglary, making false statements and violating their oath of office.

Both men appeared in court via videoconfe­rence Tuesday morning and entered not guilty pleas. A trial date has

been tentativel­y scheduled for Sept. 12.

Monteria Robinson said her son had previously been diagnosed with paranoid schizophre­nia. At the time of his killing, federal task forces were not allowed to wear body cameras. The police shooting was not captured on video, but Monteria Robinson said her son had bullet holes in the palms of his hands.

Robinson had been accused of pointing a gun at Atlanta police one week earlier, and he had warrants out of Gwinnett charging him with criminal attempt to commit arson, authoritie­s said. The GBI turned its findings over to the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office in September 2016.

While she’s grateful two of the officers were eventually charged, Monteria Robinson said nothing will ever bring back her son.

“I just want to make up from this nightmare,” said Robinson, who said she relives the trauma each time she has to meet with investigat­ors or appear in a courtroom. “I just want my son back.”

Speaking outside the courthouse alongside several family members, Robinson called Tuesday’s hearing the first step in her yearslong quest for answers.

“We’re long overdue,” she said. “We’ve been waiting for six years.”

She called the two defendants “rogue officers” and said she wants to “get them out of a blue uniform and into an orange jumpsuit.”

Fulton District Attorney Fani Willis, who took office early last year, says her team has made prosecutin­g police use-of-force cases a priority.

Former DA Paul Howard sued the U.S. Department of Justice over Robinson’s case, saying the department refused to release documents and kept his investigat­ors from interviewi­ng officers involved in the shooting. Shortly after taking office in 2021, Willis said she’d tasked her Anti-corruption Unit with making charging decisions in the case.

 ?? ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON 2021 MIGUEL MARTINEZ FOR THE ?? Monteria Robinson, mother of Jamarion Robinson, who was killed in 2016, poses in November in front of a mural dedicated to her son’s memory.
ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON 2021 MIGUEL MARTINEZ FOR THE Monteria Robinson, mother of Jamarion Robinson, who was killed in 2016, poses in November in front of a mural dedicated to her son’s memory.
 ?? ?? Eric Heinze (left) and Kristopher Hutchens
Eric Heinze (left) and Kristopher Hutchens

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States