Aaron Dean's Conviction Suggests What It Takes To Hold Cops Accountable for Wrongly Using Deadly Force
The former Forth Worth officer shot Atatiana Jefferson through a window of her home. He said he thought she was a burglar.

Aaron Dean, a former Fort Worth police officer who was convicted of manslaughter last week for shooting 28-year-old Atatiana Jefferson through her bedroom window in 2019, was sentenced yesterday to nearly 12 years in prison. The case is a rare example of a situation in which a cop was not only charged but successfully prosecuted for the wrongful use of deadly force. As such, it suggests the sort of circumstances that are necessary to achieve that outcome.
Around 2:20 a.m. on Saturday, October 12, 2019, Fort Worth police received a "welfare call" on a non-emergency line from one of Jefferson's neighbors, who was concerned that the front door to Jefferson's house was open. Jefferson, who was playing video games with her 8-year-old nephew that night, had opened the door to dissipate smoke from burned hamburgers. The dispatcher described the call as an "open structure" report, which could indicate a burglary. Dean and his partner took the call.
Body camera video showed that Dean, who was holding a flashlight, approached the house through the backyard but did not announce his presence. The noises Dean made alarmed Jefferson, who retrieved a handgun from her purse and looked out at the yard through her rear-facing bedroom window. "Put your hands up!" Dean barked when he saw Jefferson. "Show me your hands!" He still did not identify himself as a police officer. Within a few seconds, he fired the shot that killed Jefferson.
Dean resigned from the Forth Worth Police Department that Monday, hours before Chief Ed Kraus said he had planned to fire him for violating policies regarding de-escalation, the use of force, and professional conduct. Dean was arrested the same day on a murder charge. Two months later, a Tarrant County grand jury approved a murder indictment. Dean's trial, which was delayed by pandemic-related backlogs, began on December 5.
The murder charge required the prosecution to prove that Dean "intentionally and knowingly" caused Jefferson's death, that he intended to "cause serious bodily injury" and committed "an act clearly dangerous to human life" that caused Jefferson's death, or that he killed her while committing or attempting to commit a different felony. District Court Judge George Gallagher instructed the jurors that they also could consider the lesser included charge of manslaughter, which entails recklessly causing someone's death. Murder is a first-degree felony punishable by a prison term of five years to life, while manslaughter is a second-degree felony punishable by two to 20 years in prison.
During the trial, Dean testified that he thought he was confronting a burglar. Through the bedroom window, he said, he saw the silhouette of an adult whose "upper arms were reaching for something or grasping something." Since "I thought we had a burglar," he explained, "I stepped back, straightened up and drew my weapon and then pointed it towards the figure. I couldn't see that person's hands." Hence the orders that he shouted.
"I needed to see that person's hands, because the hands carry weapons, the hands are the threat to us," Dean testified. "As I started to get that second phrase out, 'Show me your hands,' I saw the silhouette…I was looking right down the barrel of a gun. When I saw the barrel of that gun pointed at me, I fired a single shot from my duty weapon." Although he conceded that he could have done better that night, he gave his performance a B grade, saying, "I did a fine job."
The prosecution unsurprisingly disagreed. While cross-examining Dean, Assistant District Attorney Dale Smith noted that the defendant did not knock on the door, did not identify himself as a police officer, and did not call for backup even though he supposedly thought he was interrupting a burglary. Smith also pointed out that Dean and his partner did not guard the exits to prevent the hypothetical intruder from escaping. "Is that good police work?" Smith repeatedly asked.
The jurors clearly thought it was not, although the fact that they settled on manslaughter rather than murder suggests that they cut Dean some slack in light of the danger he thought he was facing, even though he was responsible for creating that situation. The fact that Dean flagrantly violated protocol in several ways made it hard for him to make the case that Jefferson's death was simply an unfortunate mistake rather than a criminal homicide.
At the same time, Jefferson's response to noises on her property in the middle night seemed perfectly reasonable. By arming herself before investigating what was happening in the backyard, she did what many Texas gun owners, possibly including the jurors themselves, would have done in the same circumstances. This was not a case in which police were dealing with a potentially dangerous criminal suspect. It was a case in which an innocent woman was killed for exercising her constitutional right to armed self-defense in her own home.
The jury picked the sentence of 11 years, 10 months, and 12 days, which is shorter than the maximum but much more severe than the probation that the defense requested. Dean will have to serve at least half of the sentence before he is eligible for parole.
"This verdict and sentence won't bring Atatiana Jefferson back," Tarrant County Criminal District Attorney Sharen Wilson said yesterday. "This trial was difficult for all involved, including our community. My sympathies remain with Atatiana's family and friends and I pray they find peace." Although Dean is white and Jefferson was black, Wilson added, "this trial wasn't about politics and it wasn't about race. If someone breaks the law, they have to be held accountable. The jury agreed."
When police unnecessarily use deadly force against someone who is perceived as less innocent, by contrast, jurors often are willing to overlook even egregious abuses. If an officer claims he was afraid for his life, jurors do not necessarily ask whether that fear was reasonable in the circumstances.
In 2016, for example, a South Carolina jury deadlocked on the question of whether Michael Slager, a North Charleston police officer, had committed any crime at all when he shot motorist Walter Scott in the back as he ran away following a routine traffic stop. Scott, who seems to have fled because he had an outstanding warrant for failure to pay child support, briefly struggled with Slager after the officer drew his Taser but posed no threat when Slager killed him. Slager later pleaded guilty to federal civil rights charges.
In 2017, after St. Anthony, Minnesota, police officer Jeronimo Yanez killed Philando Castile during a traffic stop, a jury acquitted him of manslaughter. Dashcam video released after the trial showed that Yanez panicked after Castile, who had a license to carry a concealed weapon, calmly informed him that he had a handgun. Yanez, who shot Castile seconds later, said he thought Castile was about to draw the weapon. But the evidence indicated that Castile actually was reaching for the driver's license that Yanez had asked to see and that the gun remained in his pocket throughout the encounter. Yanez never clearly instructed Castile to show his hands or stop moving, instead telling him not to reach for the gun, which Castile repeatedly said he was not doing.
Also in 2017, an Arizona jury acquitted Mesa police officer Philip Brailsford of homicide after he shot and killed Daniel Shaver in a hotel hallway. Shaver, who was drunk, had alarmed other guests at the hotel by pointing a pellet gun out the window of his room while showing it off to acquaintances. But when Brailsford shot him, Shaver was apologetic, weeping, and crawling down the hallway per police instructions. Brailsford said Shaver frightened him by reaching for his waistband, which he apparently did in an effort to pull up his shorts. But none of the other officers at the scene, who had guns trained on Shaver, thought he posed a deadly threat. Last month, the city of Mesa reached an $8 million settlement with Shaver's widow.
Aaron Dean's conviction and sentence show that cops can be held accountable when they kill someone for no good reason. But the counterexamples suggest that many jurors are inclined to accept almost any excuse that highlights the hazards of the job, even when those hazards are imaginary.
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Dean resigned from the Forth Worth Police Department that Monday, hours before Chief Ed Kraus said he had planned to fire him for violating policies regarding de-escalation, the use of force, and professional conduct.
Cop had a shit attorney. Police are trained to escalate. A policy of de-escalation is in direct contradiction with their training. Dude must have really dropped the ball if he failed to convince the jury that police are robots that follow training which means training is always an excuse. The poor officer should get his money back.
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We get it Jacob, no police action is ever justified (unless they're locking up conservatives for parading). Here is hoping you get to live the consequences of the world you advocate and you live those consequences good and hard.
Atatiana Jefferson was black. Dean is white. Questionable circumstances. This is the only way you secure a cop's conviction. And even then, the odds are 70/30.
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>>the fact that they settled on manslaughter rather than murder suggests that they cut Dean some slack
guessing from radio calls down here many people thought manslaughter was too much
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Let's see, we have a burglar prowling in someone's backyard pointing guns at people. What a pity she didn't shoot first. Consider: if she blew his brains out before he got to say a thing what charges could she be convicted of? As soon as he pulled out that gun, killing him becomes 100% entirely justified. There is no argument to the contrary that will fly in a Texas courtroom. His badge is not a shield unless it's somehow obvious that he's acting in a police capacity.
what charges? I think we both know. Based on what has been typical in the past: 1st degree murder with the death penalty on the table. Prosecutors have found and judges agree that unlike the police, ordinary citizens have an uncanny ability to instantly know if someone is a police officer or a criminal, so shooting a police officer means they meant to shoot one. And if they killed them, meant to kill. Unlike the police, ordinary citizens do not experience meaningful fear during sudden unexpected armed confrontations. So no I was afraid for my life defense for them.
But don’t worry, many prosecutors very reasonable and willing to plea bargain, sometimes as low as murder 2 for a guilty plea.
Former Forth Worth police officer Aaron Dean during his trial (Amanda McCoy/TNS/Newscom)
The former Forth Worth officer shot Atatiana Jefferson through a window of her home. He said he thought she was a burglar.
What am I missing here?
Dean resigned from the Forth Worth Police Department
Yeah, something I'm missing here.
The jurors clearly thought it was not, although the fact that they settled on manslaughter rather than murder suggests that they cut Dean some slack in light of the danger he thought he was facing
Or they cut him some slack based on his intent.
A good friend of mine who has a brother and a lot of friends/contacts in various police forces once relayed a story about how it was trained in the academy that when you shoot someone, the first call you make is to your union rep, not an ambulance, not anyone else, but your union rep.
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So what about the neighbor who first called the cops? Did they get jack-slapped repeatedly and forced to write 1,000 times "Never call the police unless you want somebody shot and you don't much care if it's you."
I followed this trial on the podcast of a lawyer who specializes in self defense cases, and he said the cop should not have been convicted of anything, because even though Jefferson was innocent, Dean was following department policy and thus did no wrong. I can't argue; in terms of legal rights I assume the podcast lawyer was right.
But that just means that the moral fault here lies with the department's use-of-force policy/ROE and those who set it. There is no excuse, morally, for the officer not to have started by shouting "POLICE!!" Prowling on someone's property at night without doing that, means that Jefferson had every moral right to do what she did, and therefore, the department has a moral duty to adopt ROE that enables civilians to do just that and live, even if that increases the danger to police.
An innocent civilian's life is more important than a cop's life, because we pay them to protect us. They don't pay us.
@jerryskids- the call was to a non-emergency line for a welfare check. The cop didn't have any basis to suspect a burglary.
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So if I work for a company whose company policy is to murder people in cold blood I'm not responsible for murdering people in cold blood? Do we live in the Hitman universe or something?
wat
I would take no police action, over police shooting me (or anyone) through the window of my house … every day. Actually, police being prohibited from shooting through windows anywhere is a fantastic idea.
This is pathetic, the next in a long list of police cowards, just like Parker shooting, or the 1987 shootings in Palm Bay FL. Cowards. Man up, or pick another job.
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The cop union defender could have introduced into the record a page out of the Texas PO-lice Primer...
"B is for Black Burglar, that castle invader, the only thing worse than that villain Darth Vader
"C is for Copper, most gallant of heroes, whose cash confiscations pack statements with zeroes"
This would have put "self-protect and self-serve" in a context white jurors can plainly understand.
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I got pulled over in a big truck a few months ago by a couple of state cops. Long story short it was a document issue, no big deal. The cop was a very young guy obviously being trained by an older cop who I didn't interact with. The kid came up on the passenger side and asked me to open the door which is standard cop protocol. I notice as he climbed up that he had his left hand on the grab bar but his right hand on his holster. After some conversation I told him I had the document he needed and stood up to get it from the shelf above the windshield. He immediately said "what are you reaching for?" When I looked down I realized he now had his hand on the gun. I froze and calmly told him the document he needed was in an envelope on the shelf above. He relaxed, I showed him the required document and we all went on our way. The point is that in the most innocent circumstances this rookie cop had been trained to be paranoid that a truck driver would for unknown reasons put him in harms way. It's irrational but that is the culture they live in.
Traffic enforcement shouldn't be the bailiwick of the goon squad. There's absolutely no reason for a traffic cop to specifically be armed. No traffic law is worth a shootout.
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