Former US cop charged with murder in wrong apartment shooting
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Former US cop charged with murder in wrong apartment shooting
Agence France-Presse
Published Dec 01, 2018 06:04 AM PHT

CHICAGO - A Texas grand jury handed down a murder indictment Friday against a former white police officer who shot dead an unarmed black man in his apartment, which she allegedly mistook for her own.
CHICAGO - A Texas grand jury handed down a murder indictment Friday against a former white police officer who shot dead an unarmed black man in his apartment, which she allegedly mistook for her own.
Dallas police officer Amber Guyger told investigators she mistakenly walked into 26-year-old Botham Shem Jean's apartment, one floor above her own, when she returned home from work on the evening of September 6.
Dallas police officer Amber Guyger told investigators she mistakenly walked into 26-year-old Botham Shem Jean's apartment, one floor above her own, when she returned home from work on the evening of September 6.
She fired 2 shots after seeing a silhouette of a figure who didn't respond to verbal commands, police said.
She fired 2 shots after seeing a silhouette of a figure who didn't respond to verbal commands, police said.
The 30-year-old initially was charged with manslaughter and later fired from the police force. Authorities said more charges were likely after an investigation was completed.
The 30-year-old initially was charged with manslaughter and later fired from the police force. Authorities said more charges were likely after an investigation was completed.
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A grand jury returned a first-degree murder charge which is punishable under Texas law by up to life in prison.
A grand jury returned a first-degree murder charge which is punishable under Texas law by up to life in prison.
A trial is likely a year away at the earliest, Dallas County District Attorney Faith Johnson said.
A trial is likely a year away at the earliest, Dallas County District Attorney Faith Johnson said.
Relatives of Jean -- an immigrant from the Caribbean nation of Saint Lucia -- came to Dallas after the shooting and consistently demanded that Guyger be held accountable.
Relatives of Jean -- an immigrant from the Caribbean nation of Saint Lucia -- came to Dallas after the shooting and consistently demanded that Guyger be held accountable.
"This is groundbreaking. But it is also just a start," family attorney Lee Merritt told a news conference, with the family by his side wearing pins with Jean's image and T-shirts that said "Be Like Bo" -- a nickname for Botham.
"This is groundbreaking. But it is also just a start," family attorney Lee Merritt told a news conference, with the family by his side wearing pins with Jean's image and T-shirts that said "Be Like Bo" -- a nickname for Botham.
Jean's mother Allison said her entire country "has been on alert with the expectation that the grand jury will have returned with an indictment of murder."
Jean's mother Allison said her entire country "has been on alert with the expectation that the grand jury will have returned with an indictment of murder."
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"I look forward to the next step, which is a conviction of murder of Amber Guyger. And more so of a penalty -- the proper penalty -- that will cause her to reflect on what she has done and the pain that she has caused."
"I look forward to the next step, which is a conviction of murder of Amber Guyger. And more so of a penalty -- the proper penalty -- that will cause her to reflect on what she has done and the pain that she has caused."
Jean had been working at the accounting firm PwC, also known as PricewaterhouseCoopers, in Dallas. He had emigrated from Saint Lucia to attend a private Christian college in the United States.
Jean had been working at the accounting firm PwC, also known as PricewaterhouseCoopers, in Dallas. He had emigrated from Saint Lucia to attend a private Christian college in the United States.
The shooting sparked protests and became emblematic of the racially-charged police brutality controversies that blight the US.
The shooting sparked protests and became emblematic of the racially-charged police brutality controversies that blight the US.
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