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Noor trial: Supervisor testifies about how police identified Damond as shooting victim | TribLIVE.com
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Noor trial: Supervisor testifies about how police identified Damond as shooting victim

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
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Former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor, center, is accompanied by his attorneys Peter Wold, not pictured, and Thomas Plunkett, right, as he walks towards the Hennepin County Government Center for opening arguments of his trial Tuesday, April 9, 2019, in Minneapolis Opening arguments scheduled to begin in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor in the shooting death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. (David Joles/Star Tribune via AP)
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In this July 23, 2018, file photo, posters of Justine Ruszczyk Damond are displayed at a news conference by attorneys for her family in Minneapolis. The judge overseeing the trial of a former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor who fatally shot the unarmed Australian Ruszczyk Damond, is restricting media and public access. Thirty-three-year-old Noor goes on trial Monday in the July 2017 death of Ruszcyzyk Damond. Judge Kathryn Quaintance ruled Friday, March 29, 2019, that potentially graphic evidence would be seen only by the jury, not the public or media. One media attorney says her ruling could be unconstitutional. (AP Photo/Amy Forliti)

MINNEAPOLIS — Amid the chaos and confusion in the aftermath of Justine Ruszczyk Damond’s fatal shooting, a Minneapolis police lieutenant testified Friday that only when he spotted her photo in her home did he realize she was the 911 caller who summoned the officer that killed her.

Responding officers from that night continued to testify Friday in the murder trial of former officer Mohamed Noor, who shot Damond from inside his squad car on July 15, 2017, while he and his partner, Matthew Harrity, were responding to her call about a possible sexual assault in the alley behind her south Minneapolis home.

Testimony from Thursday and Friday continued to illustrate a chaotic scene where many first responders were not immediately informed that Damond had been killed by an officer, even as they tried to investigate her death. It also revealed that Noor and Harrity were viewed by their supervisor as productive, hardworking and trusted with privileges not allowed to every patrol officer in the precinct.

Lt. Daniel May, who at the time was the supervisor in charge of the 5th Precinct mid-watch shift, arrived to see Damond uncovered in the alley before he, along with Lt. Richard Zimmerman and a pair of homicide detectives, went inside her home to determine what had happened to the 911 caller. They passed the dining room table, and when he saw photos of Damond, he knew she was the woman in the alley, May testified.

“I was starting to form an impression that the person who was shot down there was quite possibly the 911 caller,” May said. “I was pretty confident it was the same person.”

Someone else found a letter addressed to Damond, which was how they identified her, he said.

Under cross-examination by defense attorney Peter Wold, May said that he approved Noor and Harrity to work in a precinctwide car that few others have access to. May said he had previously discontinued the squad car because it was not being used appropriately. The car can respond to calls across the precinct while others are generally restricted to three specific zones.

But, he testified, he reinstated it when a shift manager asked him about reviving it. May said he told the manager he would only use the squad for “the right officers.” He described officers assigned to the precinctwide car as “productive, hardworking” officers who were known and expected to respond to several calls.

The shift manager suggested Noor, Harrity and a third officer, May testified, adding that he agreed to reinstate it.

Wold asked May why he also approved Noor and Harrity to carry a high-powered rifle, which is in limited supply at Minneapolis police. May testified that he trusted their judgment.

“You want officers who are going to respond and get (to calls) quickly,” May said. “Obviously you’re not going to arm just anybody with that type of weapon.”

Wold’s line of questioning appeared geared at possible concerns regarding Noor and Harrity’s experience. He asked May why he approved the duo as a team when both were younger and newer on the department.

May said officers who complete the police academy are expected to be equipped to work alone on occasion, so he had no reservations about approving them as partners. Officers typically seek out a partner and ask higher-ups for approval, he said.

Young partners can often be “more active” and “more productive” than more experienced colleagues, May testified.

Earlier in the day, Wold asked officer Jesse Lopez, one of the first officers on the scene, if it was department protocol that colleagues in officer-involved shootings refrain from talking to other officers about the incident.

Yes, Lopez said.

Lopez’s body camera was played in court Thursday, showing him instructing Noor to “keep your mouth shut.”

Assistant Hennepin County Attorney Amy Sweasy tried to counteract Wold’s move.

“Is the defendant a grown man who can make his own decisions?” she asked.

Yes, Lopez answered.

“Thank you,” she said. “Nothing further.”

Harrity, Noor’s partner, is also expected to testify next week. Lofton said prosecutors did not have a chance to prepare him for testimony about driving down the alley before the shooting, as he declined.

“He’s elected not to do that; that’s his right,” Lofton said.

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