Minnesota officer charged with manslaughter in Philando Castile death

St. Anthony police Officer Jeronimo Yanez fatally shot Philando Castile, 32, during a July 6 traffic stop in Falcon Heights. The shooting’s gruesome aftermath was streamed live on Facebook by Castile’s girlfriend, who was with him in the car along with her young daughter. The woman said Castile was shot several times while reaching for his ID after telling Yanez he had a gun permit and was armed. 

Yanez’s attorney, Tom Kelly, has said Yanez, who is Latino, was reacting to the presence of a gun, and that one reason Yanez pulled Castile over was because he thought he looked like a possible match for an armed robbery suspect. 

But family members claimed Castile, an elementary school cafeteria worker, was a target of racial profiling. 

Ramsey County Atty. John Choi got the case from investigators in late September and began reviewing the evidence for possible charges. Choi resisted pressure immediately after the shooting to turn the case over to a special prosecutor, but added one to his team to get an outside perspective. He also enlisted the help of national use-of-force consultants. 

Choi’s office has said a key question in his review was determining whether Yanez was justified in believing deadly force was necessary. 

In Minnesota, second-degree manslaughter, or involuntary manslaughter, carries a maximum prison sentence of 10 years. 

The shooting prompted numerous protests, including a weeks-long demonstration outside the Minnesota governor’s mansion and one protest that shut down Interstate 94 in St. Paul for hours. The interstate protest resulted in about 50 arrests and injuries to more than 20 officers, after police said they were hit with cement chunks, bottles, rocks and other objects thrown by agitators. 

The shooting also exposed a disproportionate number of arrests of African Americans in St. Anthony, Lauderdale and Falcon Heights, which are all patrolled by the St. Anthony Police Department. The Associated Press reported in July that an analysis of police data showed that nearly half of all arrests made by St. Anthony officers in 2016 were of black people. Census data shows that just 7% of residents in the three cities are black. 

The fatal shootings of black males by police officers have come under heightened scrutiny since the 2014 death of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Mo., and led to demands nationwide for officers to be held criminally responsible. 

No charges were filed in the death of Brown, who was unarmed, after a grand jury found Officer Darren Wilson acted in self-defense. The white officer had said Brown tried to grab his gun during a struggle through the window of his police car and then came toward him threateningly after briefly running away. 

Other police shooting deaths also did not result in charges, including the killings of 12-year-old Tamir Rice in 2014 in Cleveland and 24-year-old Jamar Clark last year in Minneapolis. A grand jury determined the white officer who shot Tamir had no way of knowing whether the boy, who was drawing a pellet gun from his waistband, was trying to hand it over or show them it wasn’t real. 

In the Clark case, prosecutors said the two white officers involved in the shooting feared for their lives when Clark tried to grab an officer’s weapon during a struggle. 

Officers have been charged in other cases, though. Michael Slager, a white officer in North Charleston, S.C., who has since been fired, is currently on trial for murder in the 2015 death of 50-year-old Walter Scott, an unarmed black man who was shot while running from a traffic stop. More recently, Betty Jo Shelby, a white Tulsa, Okla., police officer was charged with first-degree manslaughter in the Sept. 16 shooting of Terence Crutcher, a 40-year-old unarmed black man whose car was stopped in the middle of the road. 

When looking at whether to file charges, authorities must determine if the officer believed he or she or others were in danger in the moment the decision is made to shoot. If the fear of danger is deemed reasonable, charges are typically not filed. To prove a serious charge such as murder, prosecutors must show that the officer was not just reckless, but also had ill intentions. 

Article Appeared @http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-minnesota-officer-charged-philando-castile-20161116-story.html

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