The man who shot and killed Renisha McBride, an unarmed 19-year-old who was seeking help after a car accident, will stand trial on second-degree murder and manslaughter charges, a Michigan judge ordered Thursday after two days of testimony.
Judge David Turfe said Thursday that based on the evidence presented, Wafer made a poor decision in shooting McBride, and he failed to pursue other “reasonable opportunities to defend himself,” including calling the police for help.
“He chose to shoot rather than not answer the door,” the judge said.
Theodore Wafer was charged with second-degree murder, manslaughter, and felony firearm, in the shooting death of McBride. Wafer has admitted he shot and killed McBride on his front porch after she was “banging” on the door of his Dearborn Heights, Mich., home in the early hours of Nov. 2.
McBride had been in an accident earlier that morning, crashing her car into a parked vehicle a short distance from the shooting. She had both alcohol and marijuana in her system according to the toxicology report. Defense attorneys argued Wafer’s actions were justified under Michigan’s 2006 Self-Defense Act. Wafer’s lawyers pointed to smudges on the screen door as a sign of aggression and suggested that McBride could have sustained a head injury during her car accident that could have caused such aggressive behavior.
A 21-year-old woman who witnessed the accident and spoke to McBride afterward testified Wednesday that McBride seemed confused and “in shock.” Another witness, Carmen Beasley, heard the car accident happen outside her home. She called 911 and spoke to McBride, later calling McBride’s behavior as “discombobulated.”









