Current:Home > FinanceJury begins deliberating manslaughter case against Connecticut trooper who killed man in stolen car -WealthPro Academy
Jury begins deliberating manslaughter case against Connecticut trooper who killed man in stolen car
View
Date:2025-04-15 18:13:42
A Connecticut state trooper’s fatal shooting of the 19-year-old man who had just crashed a stolen car following a high-speed chase was “overkill” and showed an “extreme indifference to human life,” a prosecutor told jurors Wednesday during closing arguments at the trooper’s manslaughter trial.
Officers had Mubarak Soulemane surrounded in the car following the Jan. 15, 2020, crash in West Haven and Trooper Brian North didn’t need to shoot into the vehicle, killing him, state Inspector General Robert Devlin told the Milford court.
North’s lead attorney, Frank Riccio II, asked the six jurors to acquit his client, arguing that North believed Soulemane was about to attack two other officers with a knife when he opened fire. Those other officers testified that they were worried Soulemane might harm them, he pointed out.
“If they felt as though they were in fear of death or serious physical injury, how is it not reasonable to think that Trooper North thought that way as well?” Riccio asked.
The jury began deliberations later Wednesday, the trial’s eighth day. If convicted of first-degree manslaughter with a firearm in Soulemane’s killing, North could get up to up to 40 years in prison.
On the day of the killing, North, Trooper Joshua Jackson and a West Haven police officer surrounded the stolen car after it left Interstate 95 during a chase and crashed into another vehicle. The police officer broke the passenger side window, and Jackson fired his Taser at Soulemane, but it didn’t subdue him.
North, who pleaded not guilty, fired his handgun seven times through the driver’s window at close range when he said Soulemane pulled out a knife and made a motion toward the other officers. The shooting happened about 35 seconds after North got out of his cruiser following the crash.
Devlin, who investigates all deadly uses of force by Connecticut police officers and found that the shooting wasn’t justified, told the jury that officers had the car surrounded and Soulemane could not go anywhere. He said Soulemane was sitting in the driver’s seat with a knife, but was not an imminent threat to police.
“What caused it was Brian North’s extreme indifference to human life,” Devlin said about Soulemane’s death. “We’ve had too many excuses, too many rationalizations. This young man is dead and he shouldn’t be dead. That’s the bottom line here.”
He added, “Why is dead? Because he stuck a stupid knife up in front of his face and Brian North jumped the gun and shot him seven times. He was a scared kid doing a stupid thing and he should still be alive today.”
Riccio, though, said North believed Soulemane was about to attack the other officers and was defending them when he opened fire.
“We’re taking an event that happened in real time and we’re being asked, everyone’s being asked, to critique what should have happened, what could have happened, what maybe should have been the result,” Riccio said. “That’s not what this is about. This is about what happened and what did Trooper North know.
“He thinks about this every day,” he continued. “This is a terrible event. Someone lost their life. But the question is, is Trooper North criminally responsible for that? He is not.”
Soulemane’s mother and sister testified that he struggled with schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, and that he didn’t always take his medication.
On the day of the shooting, Soulemane displayed a knife at an AT&T store in Norwalk and unsuccessfully tried to steal a cellphone, according to police. He then slapped a Lyft driver and drove off in the driver’s car after the driver got out, leading police on a 30-mile (48-kilometer) chase from Norwalk to West Haven at speeds that reached up to 100 mph (161 kph) during the afternoon rush.
The local NAACP and clergy decried the shooting as another unnecessary killing of a Black man by police, but race was not raised as an issue at the trial. They and Soulemane’s family criticized law enforcement for not trying to de-escalate the situation.
veryGood! (71)
Related
- Sam Taylor
- George Carlin is coming back to life in new AI-generated comedy special
- A North Dakota lawmaker is removed from a committee after insulting police in a DUI stop
- Raptors' Darko Rajaković goes on epic postgame rant, gets ringing endorsement from Drake
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- Ronnie Long, Black man wrongfully convicted and imprisoned for 44 years, gets $25 million settlement and apology from city
- Ex-West Virginia health manager scheduled for plea hearing in COVID-19 payment probe
- Program to provide cash for pregnant women in Flint, Michigan, and families with newborns
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- Kentucky is the all-time No. 1 team through 75 storied years of AP Top 25 college basketball polls
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- German software giant SAP fined more than $220M to resolve US bribery allegations
- A joke. A Golden Globe nomination. Here's how Taylor Swift's night went at the awards show.
- Adan Canto, Designated Survivor and X-Men actor, dies at age 42 after cancer battle
- Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
- U.S. says yes to new bitcoin funds, paving the way for more Americans to buy crypto
- Biden administration to provide summer grocery money to 21 million kids. Here's who qualifies.
- Florida welcomes students fleeing campus antisemitism, with little evidence that there’s demand
Recommendation
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Season grades for all 133 college football teams. Who got an A on their report card?
Benny T's dry hot sauces recalled over undisclosed wheat allergy risk
Women make up majority of law firm associates for the first time: Real change is slow.
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Ohio House overrides Republican governor’s veto of ban on gender affirming care for minors
Elderly couple found dead in South Carolina bedroom after home heater reached 1,000 degrees
If Pat McAfee is really Aaron Rodgers' friend, he'll drop him from his show