Experts: Convicting ex-officer in teen’s death will be tough

HOUSTON (AP) — Authorities who’ve charged a white suburban Dallas  police officer with murder in a black teenager’s death face a tough task  in getting a conviction as few of these cases go to trial and, when  they do, juries remain reluctant to second guess an officer’s decision  to use deadly force, legal experts said Saturday.

Roy Oliver is free on bond after being charged Friday in the death of  15-year-old Jordan Edwards. Investigators say Oliver shot into a car of  teenagers leaving an unruly party on April 29, killing Edwards. Oliver  was fired by the Balch Springs Police Department three days after the  shooting.

Philip Stinson, a criminal justice professor at Bowling Green State  University in Ohio, said data he’s collected since 2005 on police  shootings shows officers rarely are charged in deadly shootings. It’s  even rarer for an officer to be convicted, according to the data.

From his research, Stinson estimates that fatal shootings by U.S.  police officers who are on duty occur about 1,000 times a year. But  since 2005, only 81 officers have been charged with murder or  manslaughter resulting from an on-duty shooting, he said. Of these 81  cases, there have been 30 convictions, 31 cases with no conviction and  20 that are still pending.

In recent years, many police shootings have been captured on video  taken by officers’ body cameras or witnesses’ cellphones. But Stinson  said such evidence still doesn’t guarantee a conviction.

He points to the 2015 shooting in South Carolina of black motorist  Walter Scott by officer Michael Slager. A cellphone video captured  Slager shooting Scott five times in the back as the unarmed 50-year-old  man ran away during a traffic stop. In December a mistrial was declared  in Slager’s murder trial after a jury couldn’t reach a verdict. Slager  pleaded guilty on Tuesday to a federal charge of violating Scott’s civil  rights.

“I’m not willing to say it’s jury nullification where the jury is  just not going to convict in any scenario,” Stinson said. “But we are  getting close to that, to the extent that even in what seem to be the  strongest cases for a prosecutor, such as the Slager case, a jury is  just very reluctant to convict the officer.”

Attorneys for Oliver didn’t immediately return calls or emails seeking comment on Saturday.


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