A Louisiana Cop Is Out of Prison Early After Fatally Shooting a 6-Year-Old
Two police officers fired 18 bullets into a car even after the driver put his hands in the air.

One of the former Louisiana law enforcement officers charged in the 2015 death of a 6-year-old autistic boy is out of prison after serving less than two years.
Reason previously reported that Norris Greenhouse Jr. and Derrick Stafford, who worked for the city of Marksville at the time of the incident, began to chase a car being driven by Chris Few. Details leading up to the chase were not initially released to the public. According to an investigation, Greenhouse and Stafford "discharged their duty weapons, at a vehicle, at the conclusion of a pursuit." Few was critically wounded at the scene, while his young son, Jeremy Mardis, died after being hit by four of the 18 bullets shot into the vehicle.
The Louisiana State Police relied on the "disturbing" body camera footage from the chase to charge Greenhouse and Stafford in Mardis' death. While very few details have been made available to the public, body camera footage showed Few with his hands raised in the air just before the officer began shooting. Ballistics also concluded that the deputies shot into the car sideways, indicating that they were not in any danger at the time of the shooting.
The Associated Press reports that Greenhouse, who pleaded guilty to negligent homicide and malfeasance, is out of prison as of Friday after serving less than two years of his seven-year prison sentence.
Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections spokesperson Ken Pastorick indicated that Greenhouse's sentence was reduced due to participation in various prison programs, like an anger management course, earning his associate degree behind bars, and receiving credit for time served. Greenhouse's charges were also considered nonviolent and thus his sentence was additionally reduced.
Greenhouse will be on parole until 2025.
At the time, prosecutors argued that Greenhouse engaged in a pattern of misconduct by using his badge for sexual favors. He was previously fired from another department after the mother of a 14-year-old found him lying next to her daughter on the sofa in his uniform. He was also accused of making "sexual advances" towards a girlfriend of Few's prior to the shooting.
Stafford is still serving his 40-year prison sentence for manslaughter. During his trial, prosecutors introduced prior incidents involving Stafford, which included using a stun gun on suspects who were already in custody, to argue that he, too, had engaged in a pattern of misconduct.
"Unfortunately, [Greenhouse's] early release is yet another example of the lack of transparency in our criminal justice system, as it relates to victims and their families," said Attorney General Jeff Landry in a statement. "The ability of victims and their families to understand the complex formula set by DOC and our criminal code leave many feeling as if justice is never served. Mr. Greenhouse's early release is a disappointment, but it is up to the Legislature to act and ensure that sentencing is transparent."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
South Bend?
Nothing to see there.
"Greenhouse's charges were also considered nonviolent and thus his sentence was additionally reduced."
Homicide is nonviolent?
Obv. Yet words ARE violence, just ask David French. Pretty sure we're fully through the looking glass now.
YOUR words are violence, but MY violence is speech!
/every sjw
He plead guilty to Negligent Homicide. This could include you didn't clean the side walk in front of your house and someone had a fatal slip/fall accident.
“If you think that you can think about a thing inextricably attached to something else without thinking of the thing which it is attached to, then you have a legal mind.”
/Attributed to Thomas Reed Powell
I don’t want to antagonize any successors of our old friend Preet Bahbahra, so I’ll just say that maybe people like this, released early for the “nonviolence” of their killings, should become knowledgeable about the workings of certain powered garden/forestry equipment.
The inner workings.....
It wood be great if some people were more chipper.
That gives me wood.
Preet is currently sucking cucks at a university. He's no longer an issue.
He's also the son of an assistant DA.
"Greenhouse's charges were also considered nonviolent and thus his sentence was additionally reduced."
I thought I would post a comment on the absurdity of this, but then I reflected on the current embrace by the public of the concept of infinite genders, and realized that there is no more conflict between a nonviolent shooting death than there is between a man being a woman.
Welcome to the revolution.
Especially when to question this new orthodoxy IS violent, because some words are just too heinous to be anything but violent. That shoves this kind of old-fashioned violence so far off the spectrum that violence doesn't even exist for it.
there is no more conflict between a nonviolent shooting death than there is between a man being a woman.
Except for the shooting part. That's quite a bit more conflict.
Okay, so when does he go back on duty?
He was also accused of making "sexual advances" towards a girlfriend of Few's prior to the shooting.
What?
Justice?
In Louisiana?
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
Stop it!
You're killing me!
Drink it in, because this is as close as it gets.
Seems to me that Democratic strongholds are quite infamous for early release of convicted killers and other felons.
Anyone done any research on recidivism rates in Red-vs-Blue districts?
[…] Click here to view original story: A Louisiana Cop Is Out of Prison Early After Fatally Shooting a 6… […]
Well since he’s a felon now he is stripped of his firearm rights, which means he now has no “protection” when someone finds him and exacts the justice that is most deservedly warranted.
[…] People sometimes ask me why I moved out of Louisiana. […]