DETROIT — A police officer who was second through the door in a Detroit raid testified Tuesday that he didn't see anyone struggle with another officer before a 7-year-old girl was fatally shot on a couch.
Shawn Stallard, just an arms-length behind, said he was surprised when Officer Joseph Weekley paused inside the front door after rushing a house to search for a murder suspect. He testified a day after the victim's grandmother accused police of purposely shooting Aiyana Stanley-Jones.
"We don't train that way. If you stop that's bad," Stallard told jurors. Officers "don't stop there unless something made you stop."
Weekley, a member of an elite police unit, is charged with involuntary manslaughter in Aiyana's death. He's accused of failing to control his gun during the raid.
Weekley claims he accidentally fired when the girl's grandmother grabbed his gun in the chaotic moments following the use of a stun grenade. Mertilla Jones, however, denied any confrontation during her emotional testimony Monday and said police "came to kill" that spring night in 2010.
Stallard repeatedly told jurors that he saw no one near Weekley, who had a shield in one hand and a submachine gun in the other as he burst through the door. Stallard heard a gunshot but figured it came from someone who was firing at police.
"Did you see anyone try to take the gun away from him?" assistant prosecutor Rob Moran asked.
"No," Stallard replied.