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‘My intent was to stop the threat’: Police officer who killed Justine Ruszczyk Damond testifies

Mohamed Noor waits to go through security at the Hennepin County Government Center during the fourth week of his trial.

Mohamed Noor waits to go through security at the Hennepin County Government Center during the fourth week of his trial. Photo: AAP

A former Minneapolis police officer on trial in the fatal shooting of an unarmed woman has testified that he saw a woman in a pink shirt with blonde hair at his partner’s window, raising her right arm, before he fired his gun “to stop the threat”.

Mohamed Noor refused to talk to investigators after the July 2017 shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond, a dual citizen of the US and Australia, making his testimony his first public statements since her death.

Damond had called 911 minutes earlier to report a possible sexual assault behind her home, and was shot as she approached Noor’s squad car as he and his partner slowly rolled down her alley looking for evidence of a woman in distress.

Noor testified that he fired to stop what he thought was a threat to him and his partner, Matthew Harrity, after he heard a loud bang on the driver’s side of the squad car.

Noor said he saw fear in Officer Harrity’s eyes and saw that Harrity was trying to pull his gun but was having difficulty.

He described putting his left arm over Officer Harrity’s chest, and seeing a woman in a pink shirt with blond hair outside Officer Harrity’s driver’s side window raising her right arm.

“I fired one shot,” Noor said. “My intent was to stop the threat.”

When he realised he had shot an innocent woman, Noor said, “I felt like my whole world came crashing down.”

“I couldn’t breathe,” Noor said. “I felt great pain.”

Prosecutor Amy Sweasy attacked Noor in cross-examination, noting that Noor didn’t see Ms Damond’s hands or a weapon.

“You meant to shoot the woman to stop the threat?” she asked.

“You knew you were shooting a person?”

“Yes ma’am,” he answered.

Noor was fired from the force soon after being charged.

His lawyers have said he was spooked by a noise on his squad car right before the shooting and feared an ambush.

Justine Damond with fiance Don and step-son Zach. Photo: Facebook

The death of Ms Damond, a 40-year-old life coach who was engaged to be married a month after her death, sparked anger and disbelief in both the US and Australia, cost the city’s police chief her job and contributed to the mayor’s electoral defeat a few months later.

Prosecutors have questioned the supposed noise, presumably from Ms Damond slapping the car as she approached, by noting that investigators didn’t find forensic evidence of Ms Damond’s fingerprints on the car.

They also questioned the timing of Officer Harrity’s first mention of the thump – not the night of the shooting, but a few days later, as he was being interviewed by state investigators.

Neither officer had their body cameras running when Ms Damond was shot, something Officer Harrity blamed on what he called a vague policy that didn’t require it.

The department toughened the policy after Ms Damond’s death to require that the cameras be turned on when responding to a call.

Ms Damond was white. Noor, 33, is a Somali American whose hiring two years before the shooting was celebrated by Minneapolis leaders as a sign of a diversifying police force in a city with a large population of Somali immigrants.

Noor testified earlier on Thursday about immigrating from Somalia to the US, where he became a citizen in 1999.

He lived first in Chicago, then moved to Minneapolis, where he said he fell in love with the city. 
He said he became a police officer because he “wanted to serve”.

-AAP

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