Ex-officer rests case in St. Louis murder trial
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Attorneys for a white former St. Louis police officer accused of murder in the shooting death of a black man nearly six years ago rested their client's case Tuesday after he testified he saw the man with a handgun before the deadly gunfire and perceived him as an imminent threat.
Jason Stockley's testimony that he saw a firearm in Anthony Lamar Smith's hand before a chase that preceded the December 2011 gunfire that killed Smith counters prosecutors' claims that Stockley planted a gun in Smith's car after shooting him.
A judge will decide the case involving Stockley, who is charged with first-degree murder and armed criminal action. It was not immediately clear when attorneys for both sides would summarize their cases for the judge.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Stockley, 36, testified he and his partner witnessed what they thought was a drug transaction involving the 24-year-old Smith, who Stockley said then used his car to twice strike the police vehicle. Stockley said he saw Smith holding a silver revolver as the man sped away. After a three-mile chase that reached at least 87 mph through neighborhoods before Smith's car crashed, Stockley repeatedly shot Smith, believing Smith was reaching for a gun and was an "imminent threat" to his own life, that of his partner and St. Louis citizens.
"I was rattled, to say the least," the St. Louis Post-Dispatch quoted Stockley as testifying about his demeanor immediately after the shooting. "I just had to shoot someone. Whatever the normal human response to that would be, it's not a good one."
During cross examination, prosecutor Robert Steele focused on why Stockley violated departmental policy by carrying his personal AK-47 pistol while on duty and why Stockley — not the at least 10 other officers at the scene — searched Smith's car after the shooting. Stockley said he knew he was violating policy but that he recently had been on the scene of several homicides at which military-grade shell casings were found — and that "I valued the lives of my and the other officers more than the policy."
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}After Stockley and his partner rear-ended Smith's car, both officers got out before Stockley approached Smith's car. Stockley said he recalled lifting up the deployed driver's-side airbag and not seeing a gun but that Smith appeared to be reaching for something between the center console and the passenger seat.
Stockley testified that Smith's facial expression changed, marking "the moment where I believed the suspect retrieved the weapon that was in the car."
"I thought his gun might come up and shoot at me," Stockley said.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}Stockley fired several shots into the car, killing Smith. Stockley returned to his police SUV and put his AK-47 back inside. Stockley testified that he want to Smith's car in search of the suspect's gun and found a revolver on the floor between the center console and passenger seat.
Police reports said Stockley's DNA — not Smith's — was on the .38-caliber revolver police said was found in Smith's car.
"The first time I ever touched that gun was inside the suspect's vehicle," Stockley testified, refuting claims that he had placed the gun in the car.