USA TODAY International Edition

Police murder case appeal could affect Chauvin’s conviction

- Steve Karnowski

MINNEAPOLI­S – The Minnesota Supreme Court heard oral arguments Wednesday in the case of Mohamed Noor, a former Minneapoli­s police officer who was convicted of third- degree murder in the shooting death of an Australian woman who had called 911 to report a possible sexual assault behind her home.

Noor’s attorneys argue that a divided Minnesota Court of Appeals failed to follow legal precedents defining third- degree murder when it affirmed Noor’s conviction.

The high court’s decision could have repercussi­ons for another highprofile police killing case, the death of George Floyd. Besides second- degree murder, former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin was convicted in April of third- degree murder, as well as second- degree manslaught­er.

The judge overseeing Chauvin’s trial initially threw out the third- degree murder charge against Chauvin but reinstated the count after the Court of Appeals in February affirmed Noor’s conviction for third- degree murder and second- degree manslaught­er. Chauvin faces sentencing June 25. Prosecutor­s seek to add charges of aiding and abetting thirddegre­e murder to the counts against three other ex- officers facing trial in Floyd’s death. All four former officers also face federal civil rights charges.

Noor was convicted in 2019 and sentenced to 121⁄ years in prison in the 2017

2 death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond, a dual U. S.- Australian citizen engaged to a Minneapoli­s man. Noor testified that a loud bang on their squad car startled him and his partner and that he reached across his partner from the passenger seat and fired through the driver’s window to protect his partner’s life. Prosecutor­s criticized Noor for shooting without seeing a weapon or even Damond’s hands when she approached the car.

At issue is whether third- degree murder in Minnesota must involve actions that endangered multiple people or if it’s sufficient that only one person was put at risk. Both sides in their written briefs cited cases to back up their positions on how the statute should be interprete­d.

The statute defines third- degree murder as “an act eminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved mind, without regard for human life.” The high court is asked to decide whether “dangerous to others” must be read as plural or if the fatal act can be directed at a single person.

Prosecutor­s wrote in their brief that more than 40 states have some form of “depraved mind” or “depraved indifference” homicide statute, but “only a handful” require a defendant to endanger more than one person for prosecutor­s to get a conviction.

Defense attorneys wrote in their brief that the “particular- person exclusion” that they say was eliminated by the Court of Appeals serves an important public policy function because it helps draw a distinctio­n between the varying degrees of murder and other forms of homicide charges, such as manslaught­er, which carry different penalties.

If the high court voids Noor’s thirddegre­e murder conviction, it could still affirm his conviction for second- degree manslaught­er, which carries a recommende­d sentence of four years under the state’s sentencing guidelines.

 ?? LEILA NAVIDI/ AP ?? Former Minneapoli­s police officer Mohamed Noor is sentenced June 7, 2019, in Minneapoli­s. Noor is appealing.
LEILA NAVIDI/ AP Former Minneapoli­s police officer Mohamed Noor is sentenced June 7, 2019, in Minneapoli­s. Noor is appealing.

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