The police officer who shot dead a 20-year-old black man during a traffic stop in Minneapolis has been named as Kimberly Potter, a 25-year veteran of the force.
Potter, 48, can be heard saying ‘holy sh*t, I shot him’ after allegedly accidentally firing her gun instead of her taser during a struggle with Daunte Wright on Sunday.
Wright’s aunt, Naisha Wright, called for Potter to be jailed for ‘not knowing the difference between a fully loaded pistol and a Taser.’
She told CNN: ‘Accident? An accident? No, come on now! I own a 20,000 volt Taser. They don’t feel nothing like a gun.’
She said, of Potter and her police colleagues: ‘My family’s blood is on their hands.’
Tim Gannon, Brooklyn Center Police Chief, on Monday described the fatal shooting of Wright as ‘an accidental discharge’.
Protests erupted on Sunday night, and continued on Monday, with police firing volleys of tear gas to try and get demonstrators to disperse.
A curfew was in place, but the protesters were determined to ignore it. The police repeatedly tried to drive protesters away from the police headquarters, only for the crowd to scatter, then regroup.
Potter has been placed on administrative duty. The mayor of Brooklyn Center, Mike Elliott, has called for her to be fired.
Brian Peters, head of the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association, said Potter was working Sunday as a field training officer, training a new officer.
‘She’s just a very dedicated, passionate, good person. It’s completely devastating,’ he said. ‘In a very tense moment, she made a mistake. It’s not her character.’
Kimberly Potter, pictured in uniform in a photo from 2007, has been named as the police officer who shot and killed Wright
Protesters throw fireworks towards police as they gather outside the Brooklyn Center Police Department a day after Daunte Wright was shot and killed by a police officer, in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota on Monday
Protesters advance towards officers using umbrellas as shields outside Brooklyn Center Police Department
Potter is a married mother of two, who was first licensed as a police officer in Minnesota in 1995 at age 22, according to state records obtained by the Star Tribune.
She has served on the city’s negotiation team, and was among the first to arrive at the scene of another officer-involved shooting, in August 2019.
Kobe Dimock-Heisler died after he allegedly rushed at officers with a knife in a home.
Potter instructed the two officers involved ‘to exit the residence, get into separate squad cars, turn off their body worn cameras, and to not talk to each other,’ according to an investigative report from the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office, obtained by the paper.
Both officers’ actions were found to be justified, and no charges were filed.
Potter, right, is pictured with her colleagues on the Brooklyn Center Police Negotiation Team in 2007
Daunte Wright, 20, was shot dead on Sunday afternoon in Brooklyn Center after he was pulled over during a traffic stop for what his mother said was air fresheners dangling from his rear-view mirror. He is pictured here with his one-year-old son Daunte Wright Jr.
Potter has been a union president for her department’s officers, the paper reported, and was a longtime member of the Law Enforcement Memorial Association.
Potter has two adult sons and lives with her husband, a former Fridley police officer, in a different Minneapolis suburb, the paper reported.
She had annual salary of $86,190, according to public records from 2018.
Wright’s death sparked protests – less than 10 miles from where the trial of Derek Chauvin, the white Minneapolis police officer charged with murdering George Floyd, is taking place.
Concrete barriers had been erected outside the Brooklyn Center Police headquarters and a number of high profile sports games were canceled following Wright’s death.
Minnesota Governor Tim Walz had announced a curfew from 7 p.m. Monday until 6 a.m. Tuesday for the three counties that include Brooklyn Center, Minneapolis and the capital of St. Paul.
But hundreds of protesters defied that order and were seen gathered in the city Monday evening, separated from dozens of officers by a chain-link fence, well past the deadline.
A drum beat incessantly, and the crowd broke into frequent chants of ‘Daunte Wright!’ Some shouted obscenities at officers.
The crowds remained even after police ordered them to disperse. Officers fired what appeared to be small containers of gas. At least one protester could be heard dissipating the smoke with a leaf blower.
Hundreds of protesters defied a 7pm curfew in Minneapolis Monday night as the city braced for another night of protest
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz had announced a curfew from 7 p.m. Monday until 6 a.m. Tuesday for the three counties that include Brooklyn Center, Minneapolis and the capital of St. Paul. But hundreds of protesters defied that order and were seen gathered in the city Monday evening
Law enforcement agencies stepped up their presence across the Minneapolis area. The number of Minnesota National Guard troops was expected to more than double to over 1,000 by Monday night
A worker unloads concrete barricades outside the Brooklyn Center Police Department on Monday after an officer-involved killing of Daunte Wright, 20, following a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced a curfew from 7 p.m. Monday until 6 a.m. Tuesday for the three counties that include Brooklyn Center, Minneapolis and the capital of St. Paul
Heavily armed police officers in riot gear face protesters at the Brooklyn Center Police headquarters Monday
Protesters hold up ‘Justice for Daunte Wright’ signs outside Brooklyn Center Police Department, a day after Wright was shot and killed by a police officer
Wright was shot dead on Sunday afternoon after he and his girlfriend were pulled over during a traffic stop for what police say was an expired car registration. The officers then learned Wright, who has a toddler son, had an outstanding warrant against him.
Potter joined the police in 1995, aged 22
The Hennepin County medical examiner on Monday evening ruled his manner of death was homicide and said the cause of death was a gunshot wound to the chest. The examiner doesn’t determine intent or criminality.
Naisha Wright, Daunte’s aunt, said she was driving up to Minneapolis from Alabama today to meet he family in Minnesota. She was going to pick up her mother – Daunte’s grandmother – on the way.
When asked if she had a message for protesters, she said that she’s focused on her family right now, not anything else.
‘Everybody’s hurt. This is a young man that had life in front of him. He had a son,’ she said.
Wright’s brother is Daunte’s father. Wright said his parents had been together for more than 23 years.
‘This is not a broken home,’ she said.
‘You know the difference in a fully loaded pistol vs. a stun gun. And if you’re a police officer you should know better.’
‘If I made a mistake like that, I’d be in a jail cell. They’d be trying to put me under.’
‘I don’t have nothing bad to say about them [the police],’ but she said they needed to pay for what they’d done.
‘How would ya’ll feel if you got the call if that was your nephew or your son?’
‘People are trying to drag my nephew’s name through the dirt. It don’t mean nothing. He didn’t deserve to die.”
She said his license plate tag wasn’t expired.
A misdemeanour warrant was ‘just for some weed.’
During a tense press conference on Monday, Gannon released the bodycam footage of the incident that showed three officers approaching Wright’s car after he had been pulled over for the traffic stop.
The footage showed one officer trying to handcuff Wright as a second officer told him he was being arrested on a warrant. Wright immediately jumped back into his car in an apparent attempt to flee.
A struggle then broke out between the officers and Wright, who was still sitting inside his car.
Potter could be heard shouting ‘Taser!’ several times in the moments before she fired her gun.
Immediately after, Potter can be heard saying: ‘Holy sh*t. I shot him’. It appears she dropped her gun in the aftermath.
Gannon said he did not believe a gun was retrieved from Wright’s car.
Wright managed to drive several blocks before coming to a stop when he hit another car. He was pronounced dead at the scene and his girlfriend, who was a passenger in the car, sustained non-life-threatening injuries.
Police body cam footage of the fatal incident showed three officers approaching Daunte Wright’s car in Brooklyn Center on Sunday after he had been pulled over for the traffic stop
Potter could be heard shouting ‘Taser!’ several times in the moments before she fired her gun. Immediately after, she can be heard saying: ‘I shot him’. It appears she dropped her gun in the aftermath
After being shot, Wright managed to drive several blocks before coming to a stop when he hit another car. He was pronounced dead at the scene and his girlfriend, who was a passenger in the car, sustained non-life-threatening injuries
‘This was an accidental discharge that resulted in a tragic death of Mr Wright,’ Gannon said.
‘As I watch the video and listen to the officer’s commands, it is my belief that the officer had the intention to deploy their taser, but instead shot Mr Wright with a single bullet.
‘For informational purposes we train with our handguns on our dominant side, and our taser on our weak side. If you’re right-handed you carry your firearm on your right side and your carry your taser on the left. This is done purposefully, and it’s trained.’
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is the agency investigating Wright’s death.
Gannon described Potter as ‘a very senior officer’.
Brooklyn Center Mayor Mike Elliott said during the press conference that the officer should be fired.
‘My position is that we cannot afford to make mistakes that lead to the loss of life of other people in our profession,’ Elliott said, adding he fully supported relieving the officer of her duties.
Elliot noted that the incident coincided with the Chauvin trial, which had forced a reckoning over the death of Floyd.
‘I want to say that our hearts are aching right now,’ Elliott said. ‘We are in pain right now. And we recognize that this couldn’t have happened at a worse time.’
It is not yet clear if the officer will face charges.
The press conference, which was attended by journalists and community activists, became heated at times when some accused authorities of working hard to protect a ‘killer cop than a victim of police murder’.
Ben Crump, a civil rights attorney who helped win a $27 million legal settlement for the Floyd family, said he is also representing the Wrights.
Wright’s mother Katie claimed her son, pictured, had called her while being pulled over to get insurance information for the vehicle having recently been given the car as a gift. She suggested her son was pulled over for having an air freshener hanging from rear view mirror
Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon on Monday described the fatal shooting of Daunte Wright as ‘an accidental discharge’ after his death sparked violent protests less than 10 miles from where George Floyd was killed last year
People react after viewing the body camera footage of the killing of 20-year-old Daunte Wright after it was played during a press conference at the Brooklyn Center police headquarters
Activists gathered around to watch the bodycam video during Monday’s press conference regarding the shooting
‘Daunte Wright is yet another young Black man killed at the hands of those who have sworn to protect and serve all of us – not just the whitest among us,’ Crump said in a statement.
‘As Minneapolis and the rest of the country continue to deal with the tragic killing of George Floyd, now we must also mourn the loss of this young man and father.’
Police had revealed officers tried to arrest Wright after pulling him and his girlfriend over for a traffic violation at about 2pm on Sunday before realizing he had an outstanding warrant.
Authorities said the car was pulled over for having expired registration and they tried to arrest him after determining he had an outstanding warrant.
Court records show Wright was being sought after failing to appear in court on charges that he fled from officers and possessed a gun without a permit during an encounter with Minneapolis police in June.
In that case, a statement of probable cause said police got a call about a man waving a gun who was later identified as Wright.
Wright’s mother Katie Wright said her son called her in the moments before he was shot to say police had pulled him over for having air fresheners dangling from his rear-view mirror. It is illegal in Minnesota to have anything hanging from a rear-view mirror.
Protestors and City of Brooklyn Center Police Officers clash outside the Brooklyn Center Police Department on Sunday night
The National Guard was called in to calm the chaos and a curfew was imposed to quell angry demonstrations over the shooting death of Daunte Wright on Sunday in the Brooklyn Center neighborhood
Officers take cover as they clash with protesters after an officer shot and killed a black man in Brooklyn Center, Minneapolis on Sunday
Men jump on the hood of a police car after a family said a man was shot and killed by law enforcement on Sunday
Police in riot gear hold a line during a protest after the police killed Duante Wright during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center near where Derek Chauvin is on trial in the death of George Floyd
She said he called her to get insurance information for the vehicle because she recently gave the car to him.
Describing the call, Wright’s mother said: ‘I said when the police officer comes back to the window, put him on the phone and I will give him the insurance information.
‘Then I heard the police officer come to the window and say, ‘Put the phone down and get out of the car.’ And Wright said ‘why’. He said, ‘We’ll explain to you when you get out of the car.”
‘A minute later, I called and his girlfriend answered, who was the passenger in the car, and said that he’d been shot and she put it on the driver’s side, and he was laying there lifeless,’ Katie told gathered media on Sunday afternoon.
‘I heard scuffling, and I heard police officers say, ‘Daunte, don’t run,” she said through tears. The call ended, and she dialed his number again. His girlfriend answered and said he was dead in the driver’s seat.
Speaking before the unrest broke out, Wright’s mother had urged protesters to stay peaceful and remain focused on the loss of her son.
‘All the violence, if it keeps going, it’s only going to be about the violence. We need it to be about why my son got shot for no reason,’ she said to a crowd near the shooting scene in Brooklyn Center.
‘We need to make sure it’s about him and not about smashing police cars, because that’s not going to bring my son back.’
As news of Wright’s death traveled, about 100 people, some visibly upset and one carrying a sign demanding ‘Justice for George Floyd,’ confronted police in riot gear.
Some started jumping atop police cars.
Marchers also descended on the Brooklyn Center Police Department where rocks and other objects were thrown at officers, according to authorities.
Violent protests eventually broke out with officers in riot gear clashing with demonstrators into the early hours.
National Guard troops were brought in just before midnight as looters broke into some 20 businesses and a citywide curfew was introduced until 6.30am local time.
National Guard troops and law enforcement officers continued to guard the front of the police department on Monday morning. Police were erecting a concrete barrier as Minnesota State Patrol officers joined the line in front of the precinct
Police Conservation Officers stand watch as barricades are installed outside the Brooklyn Center police headquarters on Monday
More National Guard members and state law enforcement personnel are to be deployed around the Twin Cities and in Brooklyn Center in addition to teams already in place
President Joe Biden was briefed on the shooting and the White House has been in touch with the governor, mayor and local law enforcement.
‘We should listen to Dante’s mom who is calling for peace and calm,’ he said.
Biden then stressed that there is ‘absolutely no justification for violence’ in protest or otherwise.
‘Peaceful protest is understandable. And the fact is that we do know that the anger, pain and trauma that exists in Black community in that environment is real, serious, and consequential. But that does not justify violence…’
National Guard troops and law enforcement officers continued to guard the front of the police department on Monday morning. Police were erecting a concrete barrier as Minnesota State Patrol officers joined the line in front of the precinct.
More National Guard members and state law enforcement personnel are to be deployed around the Twin Cities and in Brooklyn Center in addition to teams already in place for Chauvin’s trial at the Hennepin County courthouse in Minneapolis.