The Oklahoman

Wife of Texas man slain by Ariz. cops settles suit

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PHOENIX – The widow of an unarmed Texas man fatally shot by police outside his suburban Phoenix hotel room in 2016 has agreed to settle her wrongful death lawsuit.

A notice of settlement filed Tuesday in federal court in Arizona shows that Laney Sweet, the wife of Daniel Shaver, and her two children will receive $8 million from the city of Mesa.

Aprobate court has approved the settlement’s terms and appointed a temporary conservato­r.

In exchange, all of Sweet’s legal claims will be dismissed with prejudice.

In a statement released by her attorneys, Sweet acknowledg­ed the settlement will help her family financially. But “no amount of money can undo the transgress­ions that cruelly removed Daniel from his family’s lives forever.”

“This settlement does nothing to cure the blatant lack of accountabi­lity by all involved since the night of Daniel’s death, which stands as an irredeemab­le blight on the criminal justice system,” Sweet said.

Spokeswome­n for the city of Mesa and the Mesa Police Department declined to comment Wednesday.

Sweet first filed a lawsuit in 2017 against both parties seeking $75 million in damages. She contended Shaver had not provoked the killing and it could have been avoided if officers had investigat­ed more.

The city settled with Shaver’s parents in a similar lawsuit last year for an undisclose­d amount.

In January 2016, Mesa police officers went to the hotel after getting a call that someone there was pointing a gun out a window.

They ordered Shaver, 26, from Granbury, Texas, to exit his hotel room, lie face-down in a hallway and refrain from making sudden movements – or he risked being shot.

Then-Officer Philip Brailsford shot Shaver as the man lay on the ground outside his hotel room and was ordered to crawl toward officers.

Brailsford was charged with murder in Shaver’s death, but a jury acquitted him of the charge.

Although no gun was found on Shaver’s body, two pellet rifles related to his pest-control job were later found in his room.

The detective investigat­ing the shooting had agreed Shaver’s movement was similar to reaching for a pistol, but has said it also looked as though Shaver was pulling up his loose-fitting basketball shorts that had fallen down as he was ordered to crawl toward officers.

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