NEW ORLEANS — A New Orleans police officer who shot and killed a puppy while responding to a call went on trial Monday as part of a federal civil lawsuit filed by the dog's owners.
The Catahoula Leopard dog ran up to Officer Derrick Burmaster after he entered the yard in response to a report of a domestic disturbance in 2021. The department's internal investigators said the dog did not pose a threat.
Multiple internal investigations by the New Orleans Police Department found that the lethal shooting of the 16-week-old, 22-pound (10-kilogram) rescue dog Apollo violated department policies and was ''unjustified.'' But after Apollo's owners sued Burmaster and the city of New Orleans in 2022, department leadership in July 2023 cleared him of wrongdoing for his use of force during the final step in the review.
New Orleans Independent Police Monitor Stella Cziment, whose office has closely followed the case, said that she saw no reason — save the civil lawsuit — for the department's reversal.
''I don't see how it aligns with policy; I don't understand how he was exonerated and I disagree with that finding,'' Cziment said.
Longstanding federal oversight of the city's police department put in place after a decades-long history of misconduct and culture of impunity is in the process of winding down. Department leaders have sought to reassure the public that they have built a system of transparency and accountability.
The dog's owners, Derek Brown and Julia Barecki-Brown, say Burmaster violated their constitutional rights by shooting Apollo on their property ''in the absence of an objectively legitimate and imminent threat." The lawsuit also said the city failed to properly train and supervise Burmaster, clearing him of wrongdoing and keeping him on the force.
The couple, whose lawyers say they have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of the shooting, are seeking damages for emotional distress after they held Apollo in their arms as he died. They declined to comment via their attorney.