Ex-State Trooper Convicted Of Involuntary Manslaughter For Tasing A Teen Riding An ATV At 35 MPH

from the less-lethal? dept

Former Michigan State Trooper Mark Bessner is going to jail. Bessner originally faced a second-degree murder charge for tasing a teen riding an ATV, but was ultimately convicted of a lesser charge. The details here are provided by the New York Times, which seems to be trying to further exonerate the former law enforcement officer with its reporting.

A former Michigan state trooper was convicted of involuntary manslaughter on Wednesday, nearly two years after he fired a Taser at a teenager on an all-terrain vehicle who then crashed and died.

The teenager, Damon Grimes, 15, was illegally riding the A.T.V. in a residential area of Detroit in August 2017. State police officers followed in a patrol car to get him to pull over. When he did not immediately do so, the officer in the passenger seat of the patrol car pulled out his Taser and stunned Damon.

Video footage of the episode showed the A.T.V. veering toward the side of the road. The teenager crashed into the back of a parked truck and died shortly thereafter.

If this is the only writeup someone sees regarding this incident, they’re going to come away with a lot of wrong impressions.

First, Bessner fired his Taser from his moving patrol car at Damon Grimes. Both vehicles were traveling at 35 mph when this happened. Earbuds were recovered from the scene, bringing into the question the assumed fact that Grimes knew he was being pursued by the troopers.

At the point the pursuit was initiated, Grimes had only committed a traffic infraction. Trooper Bessner decided to punish this with an inadvertent — but foreseeable — death sentence. The pursuit was unnecessary. Bessner’s decision to tase a person riding an ATV at 35 mph by firing out the passenger window of his moving vehicle was beyond idiotic. It was psychopathic.

Bessner retired while under investigation. His former employer has attempted to exonerate itself by stating Bessner’s Taser deployment fell outside of department guidelines. Inarguably, this is true. But what the agency won’t own up to is its continued employment of a trooper who should have been fired long before he took someone’s life. According to public records obtained by the Detroit Free Press, Bessner was a liability to the force for years.

Bessner has a history of using excessive force and has been reprimanded before for using his Taser inappropriately, including using the device on handcuffed suspects. The investigation into Bessner’s conduct shows that over a four-year span ending in 2017, he had 40 use of force incidents, 17 pursuits and five car accidents.

The last stat possibly explains why Bessner was in the passenger seat. The rest of it explains why Bessner felt justified firing his taser at a teen riding an ATV — a teen whose unprotected body was hurled headfirst into the rear end of a pickup truck, resulting in multiple deadly injuries, including a dislocated skull.

The Times article also skims right past Bessner’s attempt to change his story during the trial. None of the records obtained by the Detroit Free Press contain anything indicating Bessner believed Grimes was carrying a gun. Multiple body camera and dashcam recordings contained zero statements about this CYA theory, as did the paperwork related to the incident and its subsequent investigation.

Nevertheless, Bessner tried to save himself by claiming — months after being charged — he thought the teen on the ATV was trying to pull out a gun.

“He had slowed down and he had looked back several times,” Bessner testified. “There was one very, very crystallizing moment where his left hand reached down towards his waist.”

He later said he “absolutely” believed Grimes had a gun and that his life was in jeopardy.

“It was a deadly force situation, is what I thought, and I used the tool I had available to me,” Bessner said.

After Grimes crashed the ATV, Bessner said he and his partner tried to help the teen. He also searched the victim for a gun.

“I was shocked that he didn’t have a weapon. I was shocked at the magnitude of what had happened,” Bessner testified.

Every cop who kills an unarmed person is “shocked” when they don’t have a weapon. Some shock is legitimate. Some of it isn’t really shock, but rather dismay that the “feared for my safety” defense may only be as bulletproof as the dead body at their feet.

State Trooper Bessner screwed up and it’s going to cost him a few years of his freedom. But he didn’t screw up by making a bad judgment call on force deployment. He screwed up by assuming he could act like a vigilante rather than a law enforcement officer and get away with it. His history with the state troopers shows it was a safe bet to make. But sometimes the bet doesn’t pay off and the constant underdog — police accountability — scores a rare win.

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Comments on “Ex-State Trooper Convicted Of Involuntary Manslaughter For Tasing A Teen Riding An ATV At 35 MPH”

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43 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Yet another person murdered by the police. The police these days are so scared for their lives they keep shooting unarmed people and almost always getting away with it. If you want to legally murder people, just become a police officer.

This pig should have been fired long before this happened.

That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: Re:

Fired, charged and convicted, sent to jail like any violent sociopath without a badge and/or connections would have faced for the same actions…

It says a lot about the police that ‘history of assault’ is apparently not a deal-breaker or even something to get overly concerned about, at least until they kill someone and it becomes big enough of a stink that they can’t just brush it under the rug and pretend it didn’t happen/the victim ‘had it coming’.

stderric (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

‘…history of assault’ is apparently not a deal-breaker or even something to get overly concerned about, at least until they kill someone and it becomes big enough of a stink that they can’t just brush it under the rug and pretend it didn’t happen/the victim ‘had it coming’.

Jacey Fortin seems to be spritzing the Febreze and wielding a whisk-broom in any event. What a trooper.

Personanongrata says:

Costume Wearing Tax Feeding Turd Holes and Their Lies

Nevertheless, Bessner tried to save himself by claiming — months after being charged — he thought the teen on the ATV was trying to pull out a gun.

If the tax feeding turd/liar/murderer (ie Bessner) thought the youngster on the ATV was reaching for a pistol would the turd/liar/murderer have employed his TASER or firearm in response?

Anonymous Coward says:

This cop made the mistake of going outside of established police protocol. If the 15 year old had been driving a regular car, the police could have justifiably killed him by employing the PIT maneuver, a police approved (if deadly) tactic for stopping a moving vehicle. Simply running the ATV off the road would have absolved them of any crime, as the cops could always claim it was just an unfortunate accident, as are so many "death by police cruiser" events. As long as cops stick closely to their training and don’t get too creative, even the most egregious murders of unarmed people will always be justified, as the training and trainers are never on trial.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

Driver was not of driving age … so what? Does that make it ok it to taze em?

Not sure where you are from but all the states I have lived in, none of them allowed off road vehicle use upon the highway.

Point was that comparing the two is silly due to there being no safety equipment on the ATV, no seat belt, no air bags, no crumple zones, but you chose to ignore that.

Bamboo Harvester (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Re:

Google is your friend:

"In fact, most states allow counties and towns to set their own standards, and Arizona, Utah, Nevada, Texas, Minnesota, Wyoming, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Montana, North and South Dakota, Washington, Michigan, Kentucky, Nebraska, Ohio, Vermont, Wisconsin, New Hampshire, Tennessee and Colorado (HB15-1054) have laws allowing the street-legalization of OHVs."

I know NY does as well.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Re:

"street-legalization of OHVs"

What you are referring to is limited to city limits or possibly county roads but it in no way includes the highway system, interstate or not.

OHVs typically are not cable of speeds in excess of 40 mph, which is a minimum on many highways.

In addition they, obviously, lack any safety equipment and therefore should not go fast on pavement because most of them have a solid rear axle.

Bottom line, the comparison is ridiculous.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

"I don’t know of any State where a 15 year old can legally drive a "regular car" on a public road."

It looks like there are six such states where 15 year olds can legally drive and South Dakota has the lowest minimum driving age @ 14 years and 3 months.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Driver%27s_licenses_in_the_United_States

Eldakka (profile) says:

Reading comprehension difficulties?

First up, I think this cop should have been done for 2nd degree murder, what he did is inexcusable.

That being said, I disagree with the author’s take on the NYT article. Based purely on the quotes included on Techdirt of the NYT article, I’m not sure what level of reading comprehension the author assumes of readers to make the claims made.

Specifically, the author says:

If this is the only writeup someone sees regarding this incident, they’re going to come away with a lot of wrong impressions.

First, Bessner fired his Taser from his moving patrol car at Damon Grimes. Both vehicles were traveling at 35 mph when this happened.

The text quoted in this article, while making no reference to the actual speed, does imply that both vehicles were moving:

State police officers followed in a patrol car to get him to pull over. When he did not immediately do so, the officer in the passenger seat of the patrol car pulled out his Taser and stunned Damon.

That text states that both vehicles are moving – what other conclusion can be drawn from following in a patrol car to get him to pull over and him not doing so and then the officer firing his Taser from the passenger seat? The only conclusion that can be drawn from that is that both vehicles are moving. Any assumptions made that both vehicles were not in motion would indicate a poor understanding of the English language, or very lazy reading.

Further, the author writes:

Earbuds were recovered from the scene, bringing into the question the assumed fact that Grimes knew he was being pursued by the troopers.

Again, from the quote included in this article, no statement or implication was made that the poor kid "knew" he was being followed. It did not mention state of mind or knowledge, literally just that "he did not immediately do so [pull over]", with no mention of why, just the fact that he didn’t. If the reader takes from that a statement that the kid "knew" he was being followed, then they are inserting their own assumptions that otherwise don’t exist in the article.

David says:

Re: Re: Reading comprehension difficulties?

Well, I don’t get the "involuntary" part in "involuntary manslaughter". I mean, what is supposed to happen when you shoot someone with a taser who is going at 35mph in control of a vehicle without crash protection? Someone who is not capable of anticipating the consequences cannot work as a police officer in or for traffic.

nasch (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Reading comprehension difficulties?

My understanding is it’s about intent. Did he intend for the kid to die, or not? It would probably be very difficult to prove beyond reasonable doubt that he did. There’s no such requirement for involuntary manslaughter, which is what he was convicted of (a fact not mentioned in this TD writeup for some reason).

Bamboo Harvester (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Reading comprehension difficulties?

Exactly. Any decently-educated defense lawyer could have swung the jury on a 2nd degree murder charge – and I suspect correctly so. He was trying to "stop" the kid and his actions (tasing) resulted in a death. He didn’t intend to kill the kid, so Murder 2 is out.

The Involuntary Manslaughter charge was pretty much indefensible so far as presenting to a jury is concerned.

David says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Reading comprehension difficulties?

My understanding is it’s about intent. Did he intend for the kid to die, or not?

Again: what was supposed to be happening? This is basic physics, like what happens when a bullet hits a target. I cannot express my surprise and dismay that someone dies when I shoot him, so why can I do the same when leaving him helpless on a machine hurtling with 35mph towards the next solid obstacle? "Involuntary" to me means an unexpected outcome. But I don’t see what is unexpected about it.

Rekrul says:

Trump claims that migrants at the border are given a script to follow. What about cops? Every single time they kill an unarmed person, the same ten words come out their mouths;

"I feared for my safety."

"He reached for his waistband."

Isn’t it amazing how when faced with the very real possibility of being shot to death by cops, every unarmed person apparently instinctively reaches for their waistband, even though there’s nothing there and no reason to do it?

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