Whoâs surprised to hear this news?
Lawyers for Amber Guyger, the former police officer in Dallas who shot and killed 26-year-old Botham Jean in his own apartment in 2018, have filed an appeal against her murder conviction.
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Guygerâs attorneys are requesting she be acquitted completely of murdering Jean, for which she was sentenced to 10 years in prison last year, or be charged instead with a lesser crime of criminally negligent homicide, reports CBS.
From CBS:
Guygerâs attorneys argue in an appeal that the evidence originally submitted in the case âwas legally insufficient to prove beyond reasonable doubt that Guyger committed murder.â They said she was confused about her location because the third and fourth floors, where her and Jeanâs apartments were located, look identical.
âHer mistaken belief negated the culpability for murder because although she intentionally and knowingly caused Jeanâs death, she had the right to act in deadly force in self-defense since her belief that deadly force was immediately necessary was reasonable under the circumstances,â the appeal reads.
Although she also had a taser and pepper spray on her person along with the gun that was used to kill Jean, Guygerâs attorneys argue that officers are trained to not use these weapons âwhen faced with a deadly situation.â
Letâs recap the deadly situation (that was made deadly by Amber Guyger): she entered a young Black manâs apartmentâwhich was a floor above hersâfound him sitting on his couch and eating ice cream, and used her gun to shoot him in the heart.
Thatâs what happened.
Still, I am not surprised that Guyger is now trying to claim she killed Jean in self-defense. Disgusted, but not surprised. Itâs a legal defense thatâs gotten many a police officer out of facing consequences for killing Black people.
The appeal also argues that she isnât culpable for murdering Jean because the apartment building had an âabsurd designâ and âincompetent managementâ that led her to ignore all the signs that his apartment wasnât hers.
Meanwhile, the Jean familyâs attorney says the appeal flies in the face of Guygerâs show of contrition at her sentencing for the murder, during which she cried and was comforted with hugs from the presiding judge and the victimâs brother, who said he âforgave her.â
âAfter admitting her crime and asking Botham Jeanâs family for mercyâ Guygerâs actions in filing this appeal reflect someone who is not repentant but instead was hoping to play on the families sympathies at the time that they were most vulnerable,â attorney S. Lee Merrit said in a statement on Friday, according to CNN.
That much is certainly clear. But I would argue that it was clear then too.
Either way, Guygerâs lawyers have also asked to have their appeal heard by oral argument, which means she probably isnât seeing prison any time soon (if at all).
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