Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Kansas City officer found guilty in fatal shooting of Black man

- By Kaitlin Washburn and Glenn E. Rice

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — A Kansas City police detective was found guilty of manslaught­er in the 2019 killing of a Black man who was fatally shot in his own backyard.

Jackson County Circuit Court Judge J. Dale Youngs announced his decision Friday afternoon.

Eric DeValkenae­re, 43, was charged with first-degree involuntar­y manslaught­er and armed criminal action in the Dec. 3, 2019, shooting of Cameron Lamb. He was convicted of seconddegr­ee involuntar­y manslaught­er and armed criminal action.

As people left the courtroom, family and friends of Lamb hugged and cried. Many cheered.

DeValkenae­re’s family declined to comment, as did his defense attorney Molly Hastings.

Jason Johnson, president of the Law Enforcemen­t Legal Defense Fund, which provided financial support for DeValkenae­re’s legal defense, said the organizati­on was shockedand disappoint­ed.

“Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker’s politicall­y motivated prosecutio­n sets a dangerous precedent,” he said in a statement. “Police officers are not above the law but they are entitled to be held to the same standard as all citizens, not one based on political expediency.”

The detective was the first white Kansas City police officer in 80 years to face a criminal trial in the shooting death of a Black man.

“Justice was gotten today,” Mr. Baker said.

During the bench trial that started Nov. 8, prosecutor­s and defense attorneys painted starkly different pictures of DeValkenae­re and the actions that transpired nearly two years ago.

Lamb, 26, was shot after officers investigat­ing a crash reported a red pickup chasing a purple Ford Mustang. Officers in a police helicopter spotted the truck driven by Lamb and followed the vehicle.

Prosecutor­s said there was no evidence that anyone had dialed 911, that anyone was hurt or that a crime had taken place when DeValkenae­re and another detective arrived at Lamb’s home

Lamb was fatally wounded as he was backing a pickup into his garage, prosecutor­s alleged, saying it took DeValkenae­re nine seconds from the time he walked from the front of the residence to the back of the house before he opened fire on Lamb.

DeValkenae­re’s conduct was “reckless,” prosecutor­s said, and violated the Fourth Amendment, which prohibits unreasonab­le searches and seizures.

 ?? Jill Toyoshiba/The Kansas City Star ?? Kansas City police Detective Eric DeValkenae­re, center, is comforted by attorneys Dawn Parsons, left, and Holly Hastings, as Jackson County Circuit Court Judge J. Dale Youngs on Friday found him guilty of manslaught­er in the fatal December 2019 shooting of Cameron Lamb.
Jill Toyoshiba/The Kansas City Star Kansas City police Detective Eric DeValkenae­re, center, is comforted by attorneys Dawn Parsons, left, and Holly Hastings, as Jackson County Circuit Court Judge J. Dale Youngs on Friday found him guilty of manslaught­er in the fatal December 2019 shooting of Cameron Lamb.

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