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White police officer charged in fatal shooting of black teen

A white Pennsylvania police officer was charged with criminal homicide just eight days after fatally shooting an unarmed black teenager in the back in a case built quickly on the testimony of multiple witnesses, video and the officer’s own conflicting statements.

“You do not shoot someone in the back if they are not a threat to you,” Allegheny County District Attorney Stephen Zappala said.

East Pittsburgh officer Michael Rosfeld was charged Wednesday in the June 19 shooting death of 17-year-old Antwon Rose Jr. after the teen fled from a traffic stop. Rosfeld, 30, turned himself in and was later released on $250,000 bond.

Patrick Thomassey, a lawyer for Rosfeld didn’t say much about the charge as he left court Wednesday morning, but had earlier said that his client was depressed and had been in shock since the shooting because it was the first time he had fired his service weapon.

That speed with which prosecutors charged Rosfeld isn’t unusual for Pennsylvania, said criminologist Philip Stinson who works at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. He’s been tracking police shootings and officer prosecutions for more than a decade and said the process for filing charges in Pennsylvania makes it easier to move fast, but the specific details of the shooting also made it easier.

“Videos change things. They don’t necessarily change the outcome in terms of convictions, but they do change the ability to charge quickly,” Stinson said. “And in a case like this where you have four or five corroborating witnesses to bystander video that was released before investigators ever had it, it gave the district attorney the opportunity to make a quick decision.”

A bystander captured video from a nearby house that showed a portion of the traffic stop and the subsequent shooting of Rose and posted it on Facebook. There were numerous other people who also witnessed the shooting from their homes and spoke to police.

Rosfeld, who had been sworn in a few hours earlier after working at the department for a few weeks, pulled over the car Rose was riding in because it matched the description of a car witnesses reported seeing leave the area of a non-fatal drive-by shooting in a nearby town.

Rosfeld, who was alone in his patrol car, began taking the driver into custody and the two passengers, Rose and another teenager who police say was the shooter in the earlier drive-by, fled from the passenger side. Rosfeld fired three shots after they began running, striking Rose in the cheek, the right elbow and the fatal shot that entered his back and pierced his lung and heart.

The officer’s story was inconsistent when he was interviewed by investigators. Court documents say Rosfeld at first said Rose pointed his hands with a dark object he thought was a gun at him. In recapping his version of events to investigators he said he wasn’t sure there was a gun or that the teen had pointed his hands in his direction.

Witnesses told investigators and the video shows Rose briefly raising his empty hands before running from the car. He made it less than 50 feet (15 meters) before he was shot.

Fred Rabner, an attorney who represents Rose’s family, said they are prepared for the long road that they hope will lead to a conviction.

“And we’re not foolish enough to believe that this is going to be an easy mile to run either, we recognize that it’s going to be fraught with hurdles,” Rabner said. “But we recognize that things take their course and the investigators seem earnest in their efforts to put the case together.”

Stinson said he updated his database Wednesday to show Rosfeld was the 87th nonfederal sworn officer to be charged in an on-duty fatal shooting in the U.S. since 2005. Of those charged, 32 have been convicted, 41 have been acquitted or had charges dropped and 14 cases are still pending.

“It’s not a given once an officer is charged that they will be convicted. I would bet the district attorney’s investigators are still gathering evidence and still putting the case together,” Stinson said.

FILE – This June 14, 2017, file frame displayed on a screen during the trial of Milwaukee police officer Dominique Heaggan-Brown in Milwaukee shows Milwaukee Police Department body camera video of Heaggan-Brown, center, running behind Sylville Smith, right, after a routine traffic stop Aug. 23, 2016, that turned fatal. Heaggan-Brown was acquitted of first-degree reckless homicide in Smith’s death, one of the high-profile cases in recent years in which police were charged with shootings of black people. (Milwaukee Police Department/Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel via AP, Pool, File)
FILE - In this May 13, 2017, file photo, slain teen Jordan Edwards’ mother Charmaine Edwards, left, speaks to supporters with son Vidal Allen, right, and husband Odell Edwards during a protest outside the courthouse in Dallas. The trial of former officer Roy Oliver, indicted on a murder charge, is scheduled for August 2018 in the shooting death of Jordan Edwards, a 15-year-old who was riding in a car with four other black teenagers, one of the high-profile cases in recent years in which police were charged with shootings of black people. (AP Photo/LM Otero, File)
FILE – This Nov. 3, 2016, file pool photo, shows images of University of Cincinnati police officer Ray Tensing and his body camera footage, displayed on the second day of witness testimony during Tensing’s first trial in the courtroom of Common Pleas Judge Megan Shanahan at the Hamilton County Courthouse in Cincinnati. Tensing was tried twice for murder following the July 19, 2015, traffic stop shooting death of Samuel DuBose, but charges were dismissed after both trials ended with hung juries, one of the high-profile cases in recent years in which police were charged with shootings of black people. (Cara Owsley/The Cincinnati Enquirer via AP, Pool, File)
CORRECTS TO SHOW SLAGER WAS NOT FOUND GUILTY OF SECOND-DEGREE MURDER AND OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE. INSTEAD, HE PLEADED GUILTY TO FEDERAL CIVIL RIGHTS CHARGES - FILE – In this Nov. 29, 2016, file pool photo, former North Charleston police officer Michael Slager, charged with murder in the 2015 shooting death of Walter Scott, looks away from a video monitor as he testifies during his trial at the Charleston County court in Charleston, S.C. Slager was sentenced to 20 years in prison in December 2017 after he pleaded guilty to federal civil rights charges, one of the high-profile cases in recent years in which police were charged with shootings of black people. (Grace Beahm/Post and Courier via AP, Pool, File)
Michelle Kenney, second from left, mother of Antwon Rose Jr., reacts as attorney Fred Rabner addresses reporters at the Allegheny County Courthouse in Pittsburgh, Wednesday, June 27, 2018. At left is Atwon Rose, father of Antwon Jr. Michael Rosfeld, a white police officer, was charged Wednesday with homicide in the shooting of Antwon Rose Jr., an unarmed black teenager who was hit in the back while fleeing a traffic stop. (Harrison Jones/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP)
Allegheny county District Attorney Stephen Zappala Jr. speaks during a news conference about the shooting death of Antwon Rose Jr. on Wednesday, June 27, 2018 in Pittsburgh. Rose was fatally shot by East Pittsburgh police officer Michael Rosfeld seconds after he fled a traffic stop June 19, in the suburb of East Pittsburgh. Zappala said Rosfeld will face criminal homicide charges. (AP Photo/Keith Srakocic)
This undated photo provided by the Allegheny County District Attorney shows Michael Rosfeld, an East Pittsburgh, Pa., police officer. Rosfeld was charged with homicide Wednesday, June 27, 2018, in the shooting death of Antwon Rose Jr. after a traffic stop June 19 in East Pittsburgh. (Allegheny County District Attorney via AP)
In this undated frame from video provided by John Fetterman for Lieutenant Governor shows Antwon Rose in a campaign announcement. East Pittsburgh Officer Michael Rosfeld who shot Rose, an unarmed black teenager, has been charged with criminal homicide. (John Fetterman for Lieutenant Governor via AP)