Minneapolis police officer Efrem Hamilton said he reacted the only way he could when he fired his service weapon at what he believed was a shooting suspect's vehicle colliding with his Minneapolis police SUV.
The prosecution sees it differently.
Hamilton took the stand Tuesday in his second-degree assault trial for the November 2016 shooting near Target Field. He denied acting recklessly by firing a bullet into a carful of people, who turned out to be fleeing the shooting he was responding to. Instead, he testified, that he was acting on information from dispatchers, who identified the suspect's vehicle as a "gray sedan."
At the time of the shooting, Hamilton was unaware that officers nearby had already stopped another vehicle matching that description, his lawyer Fred Bruno said.
No one was injured when Hamilton fired, but Hennepin County prosecutors took the unusual step of charging an officer "acting under the color of the law."
The prosecution rested its case earlier in the day on Tuesday.
Hamilton, who was working off-duty at a downtown nightclub when he heard police radio reports about a large brawl-turned-shooting, acknowledged that officers are trained to de-escalate and to use deadly force only as a last resort. But he told jurors that he feared for his life when he heard what sounded like an engine revving.
He told jurors that he didn't have time to consider whether the driver's actions resulted from other factors like drugs, alcohol or a medical condition — as officers are trained to do.