Grand Jury Indicts North Carolina Officer Who Shot an Unarmed Motorist 10 Times

Last week North Carolina Attorney General Roy
Cooper
failed
to obtain an indictment of Charlotte-Mecklenburg police
officer Randall Kerrick, who
killed
an unarmed man in a September 14 encounter during which
he fired 12 rounds at close range. Yesterday Cooper, who is
handling the case because the local district attorney used to work
with Kerrick’s lawyers, tried again and
succeeded
, convincing at least 12 grand jurors that Kerrick
should be charged with involuntary manslaughter in connection with
the death of former Florida A&M football star Jonathan Ferrell,
who was hit by 10 rounds as he approached Kerrick and two other
officers, apparently seeking help after crashing his car. This time
four more grand jurors (18 rather than 14) heard the evidence
against Kerrick, which included testimony by four witnesses instead
of two. They may also have watched the 15-second video of the
early-morning shooting that convinced Police Chief Rodney Monroe to
charge Ferrell later that same day:

What they saw, according to people who have seen the video, was
a 24-year-old man who was approaching officers with his hands
outstretched. In the confusion, it is difficult to discern whether
the bullets or commands from the officers came first. Either way,
according to one lawyer who has seen the video, there was little
time for Mr. Ferrell to respond.

“In some of these cases of excessive force you can say, ‘Yeah,
but he shouldn’t have been there in the first place’ or ‘He was
doing something he shouldn’t have,'” said Charles Monnett, a lawyer
in Charlotte, who is representing the family. “There is no ‘but’ in
this case. It’s just a tragic case.”

Kerrick and the other officers were responding to a report from
a woman who mistook Ferrrell for a burglar when he knocked on her
door in the middle of the night seeking help. Kerrick says Ferrell
continued to approach after he was repeatedly ordered to stop,
leading Kerrick to believe the use of deadly force was necessary to
prevent death or serious injury.

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