Texas officer surrenders to face murder charge in shooting of teen

Oliver was fired by the force of the suburban Dallas police department


Reuters May 06, 2017
PHOTO: EXPRESS

AUSTIN, TEXAS: A white Texas police officer turned himself in on Friday to face a charge of murder in the shooting death of a black 15 year old boy who was in a car moving away from the officer when the policeman opened fire, authorities said.

Former Balch Springs police officer Roy Oliver, 37, turned
himself in after a warrant was issued for his arrest, Dallas
County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Melinda Urbina said in
an email. Oliver was fired by the force of the suburban Dallas police
department earlier this week for policy violations. The shooting, which took place in a primarily black and Hispanic neighborhood in Balch Springs, which is about 15 miles (24 km) southeast of Dallas, stoked simmering tensions over perceived racial bias in US policing.

A lawyer representing Oliver did not return calls seeking
comment. Balch Springs police have said that officers were responding to a disturbance on Saturday night and heard multiple gunshots. They came across the vehicle with the teens and ordered it to stop, but it pulled away.

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Jordan Edwards, a black high school student described by
family and friends as a stand-out student and athlete, was
struck by a bullet to the head and died. Two of his brothers were in the car with him and watched him die, family lawyer S. Lee Merritt has said. Merritt, in a statement on behalf of Edwards' family, said
on Friday they were preparing for a private wake and funeral.

The statement asked supporters to avoid holding any protests or
vigils until the teenager is laid to rest. The arrest warrant said an officer with Oliver at the scene tried to stop the car at an intersection, breaking a passenger window, according to the Dallas Morning News, which obtained the document. With the car driving past, Oliver stood behind the second officer and fired into the sedan, the Morning News reported, citing the warrant.

The Balch Springs Police Department on Tuesday announced it
had dismissed Oliver for violating department policies, but it
declined to give details on which policies were violated. Police body-camera footage from the scene was reviewed before the department made its decision to fire Oliver. Balch Springs Police Chief Jonathan Haber told a news conference on Tuesday that the video contradicted an earlier version he had released of the events in which he said the car was in reverse and heading toward the officer.

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