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Texas officer testifies he saw gun before fatal shooting

A former Texas police officer has testified in his murder trial that he fatally shot a Black woman through a rear window of her home in 2019 moments after he saw the woman pointing a handgun at him

Jake Bleiberg
Monday 12 December 2022 12:04 EST
Police Shooting in Home Texas
Police Shooting in Home Texas

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A former Texas police officer testified in his murder trial Monday that he fatally shot a Black woman through a rear window of her home in 2019 while staring down the barrel of a handgun she was pointing at him.

Aaron Dean testified that Atatiana Jefferson had the gun “pointed directly at me” on the fourth day of his trial in the killing the 28-year-old woman. It was Dean’s first public statement in the more than three years since the white Fort Worth officer shot Jefferson while responding to a call about an open front door.

“I was looking right down the barrel of the gun and when I saw the barrel of that gun pointed at me I fired a single shot from my duty weapon,” Dean said on the witness stand.

Prosecutors have contended the evidence will show Dean never saw Jefferson’s gun.

The Fort Worth Police Department released body-camera video and arrested Dean on a murder charge within days of the Oct. 12, 2019 shooting. He quit the force without speaking to investigators.

Since then, Dean's case was repeatedly postponed amid lawyerly wrangling, the terminal illness of Dean’s lead attorney and the COVID-19 pandemic. Tarrant County prosecutors rested their case Wednesday after about two and a half days of testimony.

Dean shot Jefferson after a neighbor called a nonemergency police line to report that the front door to Jefferson’s home was open. She had been playing video games that night with her nephew and it emerged at trial that they left the doors open to vent smoke from hamburgers the boy burnt.

Bodycam footage showed that Dean and a second officer who responded to the call didn’t identify themselves as police at the house. Officer Carol Darch testified last week that she and Dean thought the house might have been burglarized and quietly moved into the fenced-off backyard, guns drawn, looking for signs of forced entry.

There, Dean fired a single shot through the window a split-second after shouting at Jefferson, who was inside, to show her hands.

Dean testified Monday that he was able to see better in the darkened backyard than his body camera, but said that he could not make out the race or sex of the person in the window. He said he opened fire after seeing a gun “very close” and that he was briefly blinded by his muzzle flash.

“When my vision cleared, then I observed the person that we now know is Miss Jefferson,” he said, crying. “I heard her scream and then saw her fall."

Darch’s back was to the window when Dean shot, but she said he never mentioned seeing a gun before he pulled the trigger and didn’t say anything about the weapon as they rushed in to search the house.

Jefferson’s 8-year-old nephew witnessed his aunt be shot from inside the room. Zion Carr testified that Jefferson took out her gun believing there was an intruder in the backyard, but he offered contradictory accounts of whether she pointed the pistol out the window.

Carr, now 11, testified on the trial’s opening day that Jefferson always had the gun down, but he said in a interview that was recorded soon after the shooting and played in court that she pointed the weapon at the window.

Dean testified that after the shooting he was shocked to find the little boy inside, still thinking someone had been stealing things from the house.

“I’m thinking, ’Who brings a kid to a burglary? What is going on?” he said.

___

Associated Press journalist Jamie Stengle contributed to this report.

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