Date | May 28, 2013 |
---|---|
Time | 1:06 a.m. (CDT) |
Location | Woodhaven, Fort Worth, Texas, United States |
Coordinates | 32°46′20″N97°13′50″W / 32.7723°N 97.2306°W |
Type | Police killing |
Motive | Self-defense |
Outcome | No charges filed |
Deaths | 1 |
Litigation | Waller v. City of Fort Worth, Waller v. Hanlon and Waller v. Hoeppner |
In the early morning hours of May 28, 2013, Jerry Waller (born October 23, 1940) [1] heard possible trespassers outside his house in a suburban neighborhood of Fort Worth, Texas, United States. When he went outside to investigate, carrying his handgun, he encountered two police officers, one of whom shot and killed him. No criminal charges were brought after the officers were cleared of wrongdoing; while the city was found not to be liable in civil litigation, suits against the officers involved have continued.
The officers, both in their first year on the job, had been responding to a report of a burglar alarm being triggered at a neighboring residence. Due to the poor lighting conditions, they went to the wrong house, Waller's, and did not turn their flashlights on to verify the address as they had walked across the yard of another neighboring house in order to avoid alerting any intruder on the property to their approach. Seeing it was dark, they believed it unoccupied, and patrolled around the perimeter, where they encountered Waller outside the house near the opened garage.
Waller's family has challenged the officers' version of events, noting the two give different accounts of how far away the officer who fired was at the time, and how Waller was holding his gun. The family says Waller was inside the garage when he was shot. They also point to the autopsy report, which shows wounds to Waller's hand that they say are inconsistent with him having a gun in it at the time they were inflicted. Courts have held that it is a genuine question of fact as to whether Waller was armed when fired on; if it were found that he was not, the officers would not be entitled to qualified immunity. [2] [3]
Jerry Waller was born in 1940 in Fort Worth to a minister and his wife. After graduating from Brewer High School in the city, he served in the military, marrying Kathleen Bergin in 1968 while he was in Officer Candidate School during his service in the Oklahoma National Guard. The couple raised two children. After returning to civilian life, he started two small businesses, a tire company and small farm, both of which he was still involved with at the time of his death. [1]
May 27, 2013, was Memorial Day, the end of a three-day holiday weekend. The Wallers had cooked a barbecue meal outside that day in their home abutting a golf course in eastern Fort Worth's Woodhaven neighborhood. At 11 p.m. they went to bed for the night. Kathy made sure the garage door, open during the day as they cooked on the patio, was closed and locked. [4]
Almost two hours later, about 12:45 a.m. May 28, a neighbor who lived across the street from the Wallers, who was recovering from recent surgery and was chronically ill, was showing her home care aide how to set her burglar alarm. In the process she triggered it; neither she nor the aide could turn it off. The alarm company, ADT, was notified and attempted to call, but only reached the neighbor's answering machine. ADT called another neighbor who told them the woman next door was sick and suggested sending police to check on the situation. [4]
ADT's representative called the Fort Worth Police Department (FWPD), who dispatched officers Benjamin Hanlon and Richard Hoeppner at 12:52 a.m. The two were probationary officers in their first year in law enforcement; [4] they had started with the department in February after three months of supervised field training. [5] They were working the night shift since officers were allowed to choose their shifts based on seniority and all the positions on the day and evening shifts had been taken by those with more time on the job. [6] They had just finished working a call together. [5] Driving separate patrol cars, they parked in front of the house next to the Wallers just before 1 a.m. and joined each other on foot for the wellness check. [4]
The officers had not verified the address with their cars' GPS units. Later, Hanlon and Hoeppner told investigators that they assumed that the house they had parked in front of was adjacent to the one they had been dispatched to, [7] unaware, they told investigators later, that odd- and even-numbered houses were on different sides of the street. [4] Seeing the house they believed they had been dispatched to was dark, they considered the possibility they were coming upon a burglary in progress and decided to approach without putting their flashlights on out of concern for their safety. [7]
In the house, Kathy Waller was awakened by the couple's dogs barking, and lights flashing in their backyard. She asked her husband to get up and look outside. Believing it was most likely a false alarm from the Wallers' car, which had happened before, he put on jeans, picked up his five-shot .38-caliber snubnosed revolver and headed out through the garage door. [8] [4] : 38
Hanlon and Hoeppner at first went into the backyard, where they believed a burglar might have broken in or attempted to, as it was not visible from the street. They noted a car—Waller's—at the very back of the driveway's carport, not visible from the street, and considered the possibility that it might be a burglar's getaway car since it was out of sight. As the backyard was unlit, they shone their flashlights around searching for any sign of a burglar or a break-in. [5] [4] : 38
They spent several minutes looking around the house, both of them in the backyard before deciding to circle it in different directions. During this time, Hanlon saw a light come on in the house and notified Hoeppner by radio, who told him to knock on the front door, which he says he did. Hoeppner encountered Waller either just outside the garage door, or saw him inside the now-lit garage, carrying his weapon. After shining his flashlight at Waller, Hoeppner asked him to drop the gun. [4] : 38
After Waller eventually complied, Hoeppner said Waller picked up the weapon again and pointed it toward him, leading him to believe Waller intended to fire at him. As a result, he drew his own department-issued .40-caliber Glock 22 and fired six shots, all of which struck and injured Waller. Other officers and emergency medical technicians soon arrived on the scene and attempted to treat Waller, [4] who was pronounced dead in the garage at 1:26 a.m. [9]
Officers from the FWPD's major case unit arrived on the scene shortly afterwards. Kathy, distraught after coming out to the garage after hearing shouting and other sounds outside and finding her husband lying facedown in a pool of his own blood, was taken to a nearby hospital due to her extremely elevated blood pressure and interviewed a couple of hours later. The investigating officers also obtained a search warrant for the house and recovered evidence from it, such as the shell casings ejected by Hoeppner's gun. [5]
Hoeppner was interviewed twice, in the hours after the shooting, along with doing a walk-through, and again a week later. Both times he recounted seeing Waller with a gun he refused to put down after repeatedly being asked to do so, and angrily asking Hoeppner to stop shining his flashlight in his face. Hoeppner perceived Waller as disrespectful of him as a police officer. "He had this attitude towards us of ... it was almost an attitude of, you can't tell me to drop my gun," he said. Waller did put the gun down on his wife's Volkswagen, but remained "standoffish" as Hoeppner approached, and then picked it up again. Believing Waller might be a burglar, and fearing for his life, he fired, citing his training. [5]
Hanlon was also interviewed twice and did a walk-through several hours later, both separate from Hoeppner. He largely corroborated Hoeppner's account of confronting Waller in the garage, who kept asking him to "get that damned light out of my eyes" and eventually putting the gun on the car's roof only to pick it up again and apparently point it at Hoeppner. Hanlon added that he had identified himself as police and believed from Waller's reaction that he had heard it. [5]
Hanlon's account differed from Hoeppner's in how far he said Hoeppner was from Waller when he fired. In his interview, Hoeppner initially said he was 7 yards (6.4 m) away; during his later walk-through, he said he was no closer than the 13 feet (4.0 m) measured between his position when he said Waller picked his gun up again, leading him to fire. On the other hand, Hanlon both in his interview and walk-through said Hoeppner was 2–3 feet (61–91 cm) away. [5]
Kathy, at the hospital, told the detective interviewing her that she had not understood anything she heard from outside the house due to poor hearing in one ear. Upon seeing her husband face down in a pool of blood, she began screaming because he took Coumarin, a prescription anticoagulant, as a result of a heart condition, and she feared he might bleed to death as a result. Jerry's autopsy confirmed the presence of the drug in his system, and found his cause of death to be multiple gunshot wounds. Seven were counted, but counts of the remaining rounds in both officers' magazines, and the casings, were consistent with Hoeppner's account of firing six shots. The pathologist who performed the autopsy said it was entirely possible for one bullet to have passed through Waller's forearm before entering his chest, thus inflicting two wounds. [5]
The FWPD's report on the shooting concluded that the disparity between where Hoeppner and Hanlon said the former was standing relative to Waller as he fired likely resulted from the two officers' focus on the gun. It also pointed to what other police officers have described as the "tunnel vision", or selective attention, particularly in their perception of time around an event such as a shooting, and cited several academic studies in support of that notion. [lower-alpha 1] The report concluded that since Hanlon and Kathy Waller both heard Hoeppner shouting, he was giving loud verbal commands, that due to the light from the garage the officers' uniforms were clearly visible where they were standing, and that thus "there was a significant amount of time and opportunity for Waller to recognize [them] as police officers and comply with [their] command to drop the gun." [5]
Hanlon and Hoeppner were put on further probation while the investigation was pending; they had returned to full duty by late July. [9] In October, Hanlon was fired over an unrelated incident, where the department concluded he had falsified an affidavit resulting from a traffic stop in August, [10] claiming he had found drugs on the man when in fact officers at the city jail made the discovery. [11]
At the end of January 2014, a Tarrant County grand jury declined to indict Hanlon and Hoeppner, after considering the matter in a 25-hour session over four days. "This tragedy has been devastating for the Waller family, friends and neighbors", said Fort Worth Police Chief Jeffrey Halstead. "We respect the decision of the grand jury and now that this investigation is complete, we hope the healing process can continue." An attorney for the Wallers, whose children had publicly disputed the police account, said they would comment at the appropriate time, when their own investigation was done. [12]
On May 26, 2015, almost two years after Jerry Waller's death, his widow and their two children filed a wrongful death suit against the city, Hanlon, Hoeppner, Halstead and several other officers it alleged conspired to manipulate the department's investigation so the officers involved would be unduly absolved of responsibility. Their complaint, filed in federal court for the Northern District of Texas, alleged that Hanlon and Hoeppner's actions that night reflected poor training and management on the city's part. Had they been properly trained, the situation would not have ended the way it did. [13] [4]
Specifically, the Wallers alleged:
The Wallers also challenged two aspects of the police narrative. Hanlon, they said, could not have knocked on the front door as he claimed he had since that would have led the dogs, already awake and barking, to run to that side of the house from the rear. He had shortly after the shooting told the dispatcher over the radio that Waller would not put his gun down, but when interviewed by detectives four hours later said he had, briefly, consistent with Hoeppner's account. The Wallers alleged that the inconsistencies and improbabilities in Hanlon's account suggest that in fact he never witnessed the shooting. They noted that the department had to be aware that Hanlon had issues with being truthful not only because of what it fired him for a few months later, but because it had initially rejected his application for failing to disclose required information, only accepting Hanlon after several other police departments in the Metroplex, including Dallas, had rejected him as well, the Wallers alleged. [4] [14]
The family maintained that contrary to Hoeppner's account Waller had never left the garage, since it took ten seconds for the door to completely open and Kathy had made sure it was closed before going to bed. They noted that in the department's report Hoeppner admitted to never having verbally identified himself as a police officer. Lastly, they said that the pattern of wounds in the autopsy report, the position of Waller's gun and lack of blood or evidence that any bullet had hit it, indicated that he had been unarmed when Hoeppner fired. [4]
Waller's body was also moved, the family alleged, many times in violation of Texas law that allows that only with the permission of the medical examiner. While police records indicate 36 different officers or other personnel were allowed into the crime scene, including attorneys retained by the police union to represent the two officers' interests, the FWPD produced statements from only six. They further accused the police of searching the Waller house prior to getting a warrant, and secretly recording their interview with Kathy Waller at the hospital, actions they alleged were part of a coverup to deny the Wallers their state and federal rights of access to the courts. The Wallers noted a pattern of recent violent incidents involving the FWPD, some of which also involved mistaken addresses and probationary officers on the night shift, suggesting that this resulted from the "Fort Worth Way", a culture encouraging aggressive policing within the department. [4]
The lawsuit also challenged part of the holding of a 1978 U.S. Supreme Court decision, Monell v. Department of Social Services of the City of New York , which held that municipalities could not be held liable for civil and constitutional rights violations under respondeat superior solely for acts of their employees. [15] "The largest corporate entities in the United States are cities and counties that should, as a matter of the due process and equal protection guaranteed citizens by the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, hold governments responsible for the acts of its employees in the same way that the smallest of small businesses is held responsible" the complaint said. "[T]he constitutional rights afforded to citizens of Texas to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures are virtually non-existent under the Monell standard whereas in most other states, victims of such constitutional violations do have a remedy." [4] : 46
All the individual defendants pleaded qualified immunity and moved for summary judgement. The district court found that they were not entitled to qualified immunity and thus denied summary judgement. [2] Kathy Waller died in 2017; [16] her daughter continued the lawsuit as executrix of her mother's estate in addition to her individual capacity as a plaintiff, along with her brother. [2]
The defendants made an interlocutory appeal to the Fifth Circuit, which held for them on all but one issue in 2019. The plaintiffs' claims that the defendants' post-shooting actions had denied them access to the courts by possibly altering or destroying key evidence were deemed unripe since the proceedings they might have impacted had not yet occurred, and whether the defendants' actions had adversely affected the evidence was not yet known. "They are actively—and so far successfully—litigating their claim", wrote Judge Carolyn Dineen King for a three-judge panel, noting the extensive forensic evidence they had introduced. The courts also lacked jurisdiction under Texas law to grant declaratory relief since they alleged no ongoing or future injury. [2]
King's observation related to the one issue on which the panel sided with the Wallers: Hoeppner's qualified immunity claim. The Wallers had, she observed, introduced enough evidence to plausibly argue that Waller was unarmed when Hoeppner fired, which would be a violation of Waller's clearly established constitutional rights. The officer's alternative theory, that Hoeppner might have dropped the gun while he was being shot rather than before, contradicted his statement to investigators and did not make the plaintiffs' theory implausible. Nor was the autopsy report's inconclusiveness on this issue dispositive. [2]
The case resumed in district court with Judge Mark T. Pittman presiding over the trial of the Wallers' claims against the city. In 2020 both parties again moved for summary judgement. The following year Pittman, calling the case "undeniably tragic", held for the city on the Wallers' claims, as the training issues they complained of were "too attentuated" to have had an effect on the shooting, particularly given Fifth Circuit precedent that limited the time period courts could examine in excessive force cases to the moments, nor could a direct relationship be shown between the city's police policies and the shooting: "Although the officers' errors and the City's failure to have a policy aimed at reducing such errors are clear and worthy of blame, they did not contribute to Hoeppner's use of excessive force ... when Hoeppner met Waller in the garage, one-on-one, early in the morning, both armed with guns, there was no time for additional training." The Wallers had also failed to show a deliberate indifference by the city to the possible adverse consequences of the policies in question. As a result Pittman did not need to reach Monell. [6]
The Wallers again appealed to the Fifth Circuit, which consolidated their appeals, along with their Fourth Amendment claim over the searches and Hoeppner's appeal of the denial of qualified immunity, into one case. In September 2022 a panel consisting of the circuit's chief judge, Priscilla Richman, Edith Brown Clement and Kurt D. Engelhardt handed down a per curiam opinion, which they ordered not be published, upholding Pittman's grant of summary judgement to the city and the earlier denial of qualified immunity to Hoeppner, and finding they had no jurisdiction to consider the Fourth Amendment claim because it had earlier been dismissed. [3]
Both affirmances of the summary judgements turned on whether a dispute of fact existed in the record. Against the city, the Wallers had not shown sufficient facts to overcome the law, but against Hoeppner they had introduced enough material facts to raise the genuine question of whether Jerry Waller had been armed when Hoeppner fired. In both situations the court could not reverse. [3]
The Wallers appealed the decision to the U.S. Supreme Court. In March 2023 it denied their petition for certiorari . [17]
The Saint Valentine's Day Massacre was the murder of seven members and associates of Chicago's North Side Gang on Saint Valentine's Day 1929. The men were gathered at a Lincoln Park, Chicago garage on the morning of February 14, 1929. They were lined up against a wall and shot by four unknown assailants, two of whom were disguised as police officers.
The Fort Worth Police Department (FWPD) is the police department of Fort Worth, Texas, United States. Neil Noakes is the Chief of Police.
In the United States, a no-knock warrant is a warrant issued by a judge that allows law enforcement to enter a property without immediate prior notification of the residents, such as by knocking or ringing a doorbell. In most cases, law enforcement will identify themselves just before they forcefully enter the property. It is issued under the belief that any evidence they hope to find may be destroyed between the time that police identify themselves and the time they secure the area, or in the event where there is a large perceived threat to officer safety during the execution of the warrant.
The Trolley Square shooting was a mass shooting that occurred on the evening of February 12, 2007, at Trolley Square Mall in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States. A gunman identified as Sulejman Talović killed five bystanders and wounded four others before being shot dead by several members of the Salt Lake City Police Department. Authorities were not able to determine a motive.
The Joe Horn shooting controversy occurred on November 14, 2007, in Pasadena, Texas, United States, when local resident Joe Horn shot and killed two burglars outside his neighbor's home. Recordings of Horn's exchange with emergency dispatch indicated that he was asked 14 times not to interfere with the burglary, because police would soon be on scene. The shootings resulted in debates regarding self-defense, castle doctrine laws, and Texas laws relating to use of deadly force to prevent or stop property crimes. The undocumented status of both burglars was highlighted because of the U.S. border controversy. On June 30, 2008, Horn was cleared by a grand jury in the Pasadena shootings.
William Erwin Walker, also known as Erwin M. Walker and Machine Gun Walker, was an American police employee and United States Army World War II veteran, known for having committed several thefts, burglaries, and shootouts with police in Los Angeles County, California, in 1945 and 1946, one of which resulted in a fatality. The film He Walked by Night (1948) was loosely based on Walker's 1946 crime spree.
The Washington Navy Yard shooting occurred on September 16, 2013, when 34-year-old Aaron Alexis fatally shot 12 people and injured three others in a mass shooting at the headquarters of the Naval Sea Systems Command (NAVSEA) inside the Washington Navy Yard in southeast Washington, D.C. The attack took place in the Navy Yard's Building 197; it began around 8:16 a.m. EDT and ended when police killed Alexis around 9:25 a.m. It is the deadliest mass shooting in Washington, D.C. history, as well as the second deadliest mass murder on a U.S. military base, behind the 2009 Fort Hood shooting.
On August 9, 2014, 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot and killed by police officer Darren Wilson in Ferguson, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis.
The Ferguson unrest was a series of protests and riots which began in Ferguson, Missouri on August 10, 2014, the day after the fatal shooting of Michael Brown by FPD officer Darren Wilson. The unrest sparked a vigorous debate in the United States about the relationship between law enforcement officers and Black Americans, the militarization of police, and the use-of-force law in Missouri and nationwide. Continuing activism expanded the issues by including modern-day debtors prisons, for-profit policing, and school segregation.
On November 22, 2014, Tamir E. Rice, a 12-year-old African American boy, was killed in Cleveland, Ohio, by Timothy Loehmann, a 26-year-old white police officer. Rice was carrying a replica toy gun; Loehmann shot him almost immediately upon arriving on the scene. Two officers, Loehmann and 46-year-old Frank Garmback, were responding to a police dispatch call regarding a male who had a gun. A caller reported that a male was pointing "a pistol" at random people at the Cudell Recreation Center, a park in the City of Cleveland's Public Works Department. At the beginning of the call and again in the middle, he says of the pistol "it's probably fake." Toward the end of the two-minute call the caller states that "he is probably a juvenile", but the dispatcher did not relay either of these statements to Loehmann and Garmback.
Akai Gurley, a 28-year-old black man, was fatally shot on November 20, 2014, in Brooklyn, New York City, United States, by a New York City Police Department officer. Two police officers, patrolling stairwells in the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA)'s Louis H. Pink Houses in East New York, Brooklyn, entered a pitch-dark, unlit stairwell. Officer Peter Liang, 27, had his firearm drawn. Gurley and his girlfriend entered the seventh-floor stairwell, fourteen steps below them. Liang fired his weapon; the shot ricocheted off a wall and fatally struck Gurley in the chest. A jury convicted Liang of manslaughter, which a court later reduced to criminally negligent homicide.
The shooting of Antonio Martin occurred on December 23, 2014, in Berkeley, Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis. Martin, an 18-year-old black male, was fatally shot by a white Berkeley police officer when Martin pulled a gun on him. The shooting sparked protests in the St. Louis area and other cities in the U.S. The shooting elicited comparison to the earlier shooting death of Michael Brown two miles away in Ferguson, Missouri.
The killing of Tony Terrell Robinson Jr. occurred on March 6, 2015, in Madison, Wisconsin. Robinson, an unarmed 19-year-old man, was fatally shot by Madison police officer Matthew Kenny during a "check-person" call. Kenny was responding to dispatch reports that Robinson was jumping in front of cars and acting erratically, and that he had harmed someone in an apartment. On May 12, 2015, the shooting was determined to be justified self-defense by the Dane County District Attorney Ismael Ozanne. The death was protested by the Black Lives Matter movement; Robinson was biracial, with a black father and a white mother.
On July 18, 2016, Charles Kinsey, a behavior therapist, was shot in the leg by a police officer in North Miami, Florida. Kinsey had been retrieving his 27-year-old autistic patient, Arnaldo Rios Soto, who had run away from his group home. Police encountered the pair while they were searching for an armed suicidal man. Kinsey was lying on the ground with his hands in the air, and trying to negotiate between officers and his patient, when he was shot. The officer who shot Kinsey said he had been aiming at the patient, who the officer believed was threatening Kinsey with a gun. Both Kinsey and his patient were unarmed.
On January 6, 2017, a mass shooting occurred at Fort Lauderdale–Hollywood International Airport in Broward County, Florida, United States, near the baggage claim in Terminal 2. Five people were killed while six others were injured in the shooting. About 36 people sustained injuries in the ensuing panic. Esteban Santiago-Ruiz, who flew in to the airport from Alaska and committed the shooting with a Walther PPS 9mm semi-automatic pistol, was taken into custody by a Broward County Sheriff's Office (BSO) deputy within 85 seconds after he started shooting. The shooting from start to finish lasted 70–80 seconds. Santiago was later diagnosed with schizophrenia and pleaded guilty to avoid possible execution. On August 17, 2018, Santiago was sentenced to five consecutive life sentences plus 120 years in prison.
On the night of September 6, 2018, 26-year-old accountant Botham Jean was murdered in Dallas, Texas by off-duty Dallas Police Department patrol officer Amber Guyger, who entered Jean's apartment and fatally shot him. Guyger, who said that she had entered Jean's apartment believing it was her own and believed Jean to be a burglar, was initially charged with manslaughter. The absence of a murder charge led to protests and accusations of racial bias because Jean—an unarmed black man—was killed in his own home by a white off-duty officer who had apparently disregarded police protocols. On November 30, 2018, Guyger was indicted on a charge of murder. On October 1, 2019, she was found guilty of murder, and was sentenced to ten years' imprisonment the following day. The ruling was upheld on appeal in 2021.
Atatiana Koquice Jefferson, a 28-year-old woman, was fatally shot inside her home by a police officer in Fort Worth, Texas, United States, in the early morning of October 12, 2019. Police arrived at her home after a neighbor called a non-emergency number, stating that Jefferson's front door was open. Police body camera footage showed officers walking outside the home with flashlights for a few minutes then one officer yells, "Put your hands up! Show me your hands!", while discharging his weapon through a window. Police found a handgun near Jefferson's body, which according to her eight-year-old nephew, she was pointing toward the window before being shot. On October 14, 2019, Officer Aaron Dean, the shooter, resigned from the Fort Worth Police Department and was arrested on a murder charge. On December 20, 2019, Dean was indicted for murder. Jefferson was black and the officer who shot her is white, prompting news outlets to compare Jefferson's shooting to the September 2018 murder of Botham Jean in nearby Dallas.
On August 29, 2020, Aaron Danielson, an American supporter of the far-right group Patriot Prayer, was shot and killed after participating in a caravan which drove through Portland, Oregon, displaying banners and signs supporting President Donald Trump, and clashing with participants in the local George Floyd protests.
Sara-Nicole Morales was shot and killed in the front yard of her mother's house in Orange City, Florida, United States. While returning home from her job at a Volusia County library, she had become embroiled in a road rage incident with a local motorcyclist, during which she had intentionally struck his vehicle with hers, an act witnessed by two nearby motorists. The three notified police and followed her to the house, where she confronted them with her fiancé's pistol. The motorcyclist drew his own gun and shot her five times.
Very early on March 5, 2019, Midland, Texas, United States, police officer Nathan Heidelberg was shot and killed while responding with fellow officers to a residence where a burglar alarm had gone off, the first Midland police officer killed on the job in over 50 years. The homeowner, David Wilson, an oil company executive who had fired the fatal shot in the belief that Heidelberg was an intruder attempting to force his way into his family home, was arrested and charged with manslaughter, later increased to murder by a grand jury. In late 2021, he was acquitted.