A Washington County sheriff's deputy believed he was in the line of fire from a Lake Elmo man kneeling with a gun to his own head, so he fired at him four times, killing him in what his defense team said Monday was a justified shooting.
That was one of the points at a hearing in the case against Washington County deputy Brian Krook. His defense attorneys are seeking to throw out the grand jury indictment of second-degree manslaughter for the April 2018 shooting of 23-year-old Benjamin Evans.
Krook, 31, shot Evans after law enforcement responded to a 911 call about a suicidal man in a Lake Elmo intersection. He is the third officer in recent years to face criminal charges for a fatal shooting while on duty in Minnesota.
Prosecutors argued that Krook used excessive force on a man who had surrendered all but one bullet in his gun that he was holding to his own skull. Krook's defense in part is that Evans may have been trying to commit "suicide-by-cop," inducing law enforcement to kill him.
Evans' movements with the gun were getting "close to where it's pointing at us, and I am getting uncomfortable," one of the defense's dismissal filings quoted Krook's grand jury statement as reading. "I'm worried that if, you know, if he did pull the trigger while he's got his head turned the bullet is going to come at us or at, you know, me [and deputies Michael Ramos or Joshua Ramirez]. So I, and at one point, make a comment like I'm not comfortable with him turning his head."
According to the court filings, Krook said, "so he turns his head again ... so I fired, um I just fired."
The case is set for trial March 9, but Krook's defense attorney Paul Engh argued that Ramsey County prosecutors, who are handling the case to avoid a conflict of interest, should have called Steven Frazer, a former Ramsey County Sheriff's deputy who is now police chief of Prior Lake, to testify before the grand jury. Because they didn't, he argued, the indictment is null.
About a year ago, Frazer reviewed the file on the shooting at the request of Richard Dusterhoft, head of the Ramsey County Attorney's office criminal division. Frazer testified that he determined the shooting was legitimate and not criminal given the "totality of the circumstances" at the time.