Former officer Mohamed Noor's lawyers want charges dismissed in Damond death

Former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor is charged with third degree murder and second degree manslaughter in the fatal officer-involved shooting of Justine Damond last July. 

Defense attorneys want charges dismissed against a former Minneapolis police officer who shot and killed an Australian woman last year.

Attorneys for ex-officer Mohamed Noor argue in motions filed Wednesday that the charges should be dropped because of prosecutorial misconduct and lack of probable cause.

Noor is charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the July 15, 2017, death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond, a 40-year-old life coach who was engaged to be married. She was killed after calling 911 to report a possible sexual assault.

Prosecutors say Noor was in a squad car's passenger seat when he shot Damond through the driver's side window after she approached the vehicle. Noor's attorneys argue Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman's statements about the case "have undermined Officer Noor's fundamental right to a fair trial."

"The Hennepin County Attorney's statements in this case are irresponsible, inexcusable and rise to a level of professional misconduct that cheats citizens out of a fair trial," they wrote in their filings.

A spokesman for Freeman's office declined comment Wednesday. A hearing on the motions is scheduled for Sept. 27. 

The defense points out that Freeman told a group of activists in a recorded conversation in December, before Noor was charged, that he didn't have enough evidence yet, investigators "haven't done their job" and having enough evidence to make a charging decision would be "the big present I'd like to see under the Christmas tree."

"His comments are not merely racially and culturally insensitive -- they are full of animosity. They mock due process. They deny due process," the attorneys argue.

The arrival of the 32-year-old Noor, a Somali-American, on the force had been celebrated by city leaders and Minnesota's large Somali community. He has since been fired.

Noor's attorneys also argued that the third-degree murder charge does not meet the "depraved mind" standard under Minnesota law.

Noor's partner the night of the shooting, Officer Matthew Harrity, said both he and Noor "got spooked" when Damond approached their sport utility vehicle, and that Harrity feared for his life.

Harrity, who was driving, said he heard a voice and a thump on the back of the squad SUV, and glimpsed a person's head and shoulders outside his window. Noor fired through the open driver's side window, fatally shooting Damond in the abdomen.

Prosecutors contend Noor acted recklessly and was not justified in using deadly force. But the defense contends Noor's actions "were the product of a split second reaction."

"Officer Noor's actions to defend his partner and himself, in the context of that night, are not evidence of the depraved mind envisioned by the courts for the last hundred years," the defense filings say.

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