A University of Cincinnati officer was indicted for murder Wednesday for fatally shooting an unarmed black man in the head following a routine traffic stop earlier this month.
A Cincinnati grand jury indicted University of Cincinnati police officer Ray Tensing in the July 19 death of 43-year-old Samuel DuBose, who was pulled over for not having a front license plate on his car, Hamilton County Prosecuting Attorney Joseph T. Deters said in a press conference Wednesday.
“This is without question a murder,” Deters said.
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Authorities released the footage of the officer’s body camera depicting the stop and subsequent shooting that took place in just a matter of minutes. The recording shows an initially calm verbal exchange as the officer asks repeatedly if DuBose has his license on him and motions toward a bottle in the car. DuBose hands over a bottle of gin without protest and says he doesn’t have his license on him.
From there, a scuffle devolves into violence in a matter of moments after Tensing tells DuBose to take off his seat belt. When DuBose protests, Tensing reaches into the car, pulls out his gun and opens fire, shooting DeBose in the head.
Prosecutors said DeBose was killed instantly, but slumped forward in the car with his foot on the accelerator of the car, moving the vehicle forward until it crashed down the road.
Tensing has turned himself in, the Cincinnati Police Department said, and is scheduled for arraignment Thursday. He has been fired, effective immediately, after serving on the university’s police force since April 2014, University of Cincinnati President Santa Ono said Wednesday.
In his incident report, Tensing said he opened fire after being dragged by Dubose’s car. But a very emotional and somber Deters said the video evidence contradicted the officer’s original account. He did not mince words in condemning the officer’s actions, calling the fatal shooting “the most asinine act I’ve ever seen a police officer make.”
“He wasn’t dealing with someone wanted for murder. He was dealing with someone who didn’t have a front license plate. This is, in the vernacular, a pretty chicken crap stop, right? I could use harsher words,” Deters said. “If he’s rolling away then let him go. You don’t have to shoot him in the head.”
DuBose was put to rest at his funeral a day earlier. Flanked by family members at a press conference following the prosecutor’s announcement, his mother Audrey DuBose said she was thankful that the investigation into her son’s death was not shrouded in secrecy.
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