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Fort Worth Cop Who Shot and Killed Atatiana Jefferson in Her Home Charged with Murder

 

On the same day that 28-year-old Atatiana “Tay” Jefferson’s grieving siblings demanded that the Fort Worth officer who killed her in her home early Saturday face consequences for his actions, that officer resigned from the force ahead of a would-be firing. Hours later, 35-year-old Aaron Dean was charged with murder.

Dean is pictured below in his mugshot, which was taken in Tarrant County. Records reviewed by Law&Crime show that Dean’s bond has been set at $200,000.

Tarrant County Correction Center

Earlier Monday, Adarius Carr, Jefferson’s brother, said he is currently stationed in San Diego and has “served [his] country for the last 12 years.” He said that officers and military alike are “trained and taught there are pre-planned responses to everything you do.”

“But when you don’t do it the way you’ve been trained or you’ve been taught, you have to answer for that,” he said. “This man murdered someone. He should be arrested.”

Ashley Carr, one of Jefferson’s older sisters, said that her deceased loved one was “killed by a reckless act.”

“There is simply no justification for [the officer’s] actions,” she said.

Amber Carr, the victim’s older sister by 11 months, said it was her 8-year-old son that Jefferson was watching when she was killed. She also said her son was the first to tell her what happened. Jefferson was playing video games with the boy before she was shot. He witnessed the killing.

Attorney S. Lee Merritt, who represented murder victim Botham Jean’s family, demanded that the shooting be independently investigated. On Monday, he called for Dean to be “vigorously prosecuted.” Merritt said that Fort Worth needed to recuse itself from the investigation, bring in an outside agency, and ensure the officer was “treated like any other criminal suspect in the criminal justice system.”

Merritt said on Saturday that Jefferson was murdered.

“She was playing video games with her nephew when they heard what they believed to be a prowler creeping around the back window of the home,”Merritt said in a statement Saturday. “When she went to see what was going on she was confronted by an officer with his gun drawn shouting commands. With just seconds to comply, she was shot through the window.”

The police shooting occurred early Saturday morning (around 2:30 a.m.) — less than two weeks after a jury convicted former Dallas cop Amber Guyger of murder for shooting and killing Botham Jean in his own home. In both of these cases, the officers were white and the victims were black. Guyger claimed that she parked on the wrong floor of her apartment complex, only to barge into Jean’s apartment thinking it was hers; she shot him to death believing he was an intruder, she said. In the Jefferson case, a neighbor called police at a non-emergency number because he was concerned that the front door of Jefferson’s home was open.

James Smith, 62, told reporters Saturday that he got a call from his niece that his neighbor’s front doors were open. He said this was unusual for Jefferson; he saw all the lights in the house were on. He said he called officers to the scene, but meant it only as a welfare check to make sure everything was okay. Smith said he gave no indication that this would have been a dangerous situation justifying officers approaching with their guns drawn. Smith said he didn’t know what was going on at the home, but maintained that Jefferson would not have been a threat.

“The front doors have been open since 10 p.m., and I haven’t seen anyone leave the house,” Smith told authorities.

A police officer, now known to be Dean, responded to the scene and killed Jefferson.

Police announced Saturday that Jefferson was shot and killed when officers responded to an Open Structure call. They noted that a front door to the residence was open. Responding officers searched outside the home, and saw a person standing inside near a window.

“Perceiving a threat the officer drew his duty weapon and fired one shot striking the person inside the residence,” police said.

Jefferson was given no time to comply with the officer’s commands, as the fatal shot was fired less than two seconds after he ordered her to put her hands up. The body cam footage does not show him identifying himself as a police officer. The officer joined the department in April 2018.

According to authorities, officers found Jefferson and a firearm inside the home. Merritt said that firearm was legally owned.

Read more about this case here:

Atatiana Jefferson’s Family Demands Prosecution of Fort Worth Cop Who Killed Her

Fort Worth Cop Who Killed Atatiana Jefferson Resigned Before He Could Be Fired, Faces Local and Federal Probes

Fort Worth Police Caught in Blatant Contradiction When Asked to Release Aaron Dean’s Official Photo

Black Woman Killed During Police Welfare Check Was Playing Video Games with Nephew: Attorney

[Image via Inside Edition screengrab]

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Matt Naham is the Senior A.M. Editor of Law&Crime.