- Kim Potter is on trial for the police shooting of Daunte Wright in April.
- Potter has said that she meant to grab her Taser instead of her gun when she fatally shot Wright during a traffic stop.
- An expert witness testified Wednesday that Potter's use of deadly force was "excessive and inappropriate."
An expert witness testified Wednesday that Kim Potter's use of deadly force was "excessive and inappropriate" when the Brooklyn Center police officer shot Daunte Wright during a traffic stop.
Potter, who has since resigned from the force, faces charges of first- and second-degree manslaughter for fatally shooting Wright in April. She has pleaded not guilty to both charges, and faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted.
Seth Stoughton, a professor at the University of South Carolina School of Law, took the witness stand Wednesday. Stoughton has a background in law enforcement, is an expert on evaluating police uses of force, and has also written a book titled, "Evaluating Police Uses of Force."
Stoughton told the jury that he had reviewed body camera footage of the shooting, and that he found Potter's use of deadly force against Wright to be "not appropriate."
Potter and her partner had pulled Wright over for driving with an expired license plate, and determined during the traffic stop that Wright had a warrant out for his arrest. Police body-camera footage played in court shows Potter shout, "Taser! Taser! Taser!" before shooting Wright in the chest while Wright tries to sit down in the driver's seat of his car.
Prosecutor Matthew Frank asked Stoughton if he had an opinion about whether or not Potter's use of deadly force was reasonable and justified. Stoughton said that he did not think Potter's conduct was appropriate.
"The evidence suggests that a reasonable officer in Officer Potter's position would not have believed that it was proportional to the threat at the time," Stoughton said. "In other words, the use of force was apparently excessive and inappropriate."
Potter has claimed that she intended to grab her Taser, which was holstered on the opposite side of her body, and not her gun when she shot Wright.
Potter's defense strenuously objected to the state's lines of questioning following Stoughton's assessment. Defense attorney Earl Gray objected when Frank asked the use-of-force expert if the evidence suggested that Potter did not believe there was a threat of imminent bodily harm at the time she shot Wright.
Hennepin County Judge Regina Chu sustained the objection, because she said Stoughton did not have the foundation to testify about what Potter could have known or been aware of in that moment, and could only testify about how a reasonable officer would have acted at the time.