A federal jury awarded $23.1
million on Wednesday to a 22-year-old black man who was unarmed when he was
shot and paralyzed by a sheriff’s deputy, but Florida lawmakers will have to
approve any award above $200,000.
The six-woman, two-man jury
ruled after 3 1/2 hours of deliberation that Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Sgt.
Adams Lin violated Dontrell Stephens’ civil rights when he shot him in
September 2013.
Lin, who had stopped Stephens
for riding his bicycle into traffic, testified that he shot him four times
because he reached for his waistband with his left hand and then flashed a dark
object that he thought was a small handgun.
Stephens testified that he was
raising his hands when Lin opened fire for no reason. Video from the dashboard
camera in Lin’s patrol car showed Stephens’ left hand was empty and a cellphone
was in his right hand.
An appeal is expected.
Stephens had been seeking more than $5 million to cover medical treatment and
future care, but his attorney Darryl Lewis told a federal jury in his closing
arguments Wednesday that the man should get at least $24 million.
Lewis said Stephens will have
more than $6 million in medical expenses during his lifetime, and that he
deserves at least $18 million for his pain and suffering.
The jury apparently rejected
Lin’s claim that he had made an “objectively reasonable mistake” when he shot
Stephens.
The case is among several nationwide
that have sparked debate about the deaths of unarmed black males following
encounters with law enforcement officers.
Federal Magistrate Judge Barry
S. Seltzer had instructed jurors that they could consider only the specific
circumstances of Stephens’ shooting and no other.
Lin, an Asian-American, was
cleared of criminal wrongdoing by sheriff’s investigators and local prosecutors
and was later promoted to sergeant.
Lin, 38 and a 12-year veteran
of the sheriff’s office, testified that he stopped Stephens for riding his
bicycle into traffic and because he didn’t recognize him from the neighborhood.
Stephens had been riding back
to a friend’s house where he had been staying after a trip to a convenience
store.
In the dashcam video, Lin
speeds up his patrol car to catch Stephens as he pedals down a West Palm Beach
residential street.
Stephens sees Lin and turns
into the parking lot of a duplex, hops off his bike and puts it down, his right
hand holding his cellphone. Stephens moves behind a car and both men are now
outside the camera’s view.
Attorneys for both men say Lin
told Stephens to put up his hands, but a radio station is playing in Lin’s car
and no verbal exchange can be heard.
The shots are fired in rapid
succession after Lin exits the car. Stephens comes back into the frame, makes
two quick steps, turns and falls to the ground
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