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New York cop in stairwell shooting chokes up on witness stand: ‘Oh, my God, someone’s hit’

Officer Peter Liang arrives at court in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Officer Peter Liang arrives at court in Brooklyn, N.Y.

(Jewel Samad / Getty Images)
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A police officer took the stand Monday to give his account of the deadly shooting of an unarmed man in a darkened stairwell of a public housing complex.

Peter Liang choked up in his own defense and had to leave the witness stand for about a minute to compose himself.

Liang is charged with manslaughter in the 2014 death of Akai Gurley in the Louis Pink Houses in Brooklyn.

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The officer began by describing what are called “vertical patrols” in stairwells. He noted that public housing stairways can be sites of crime and danger.

The stairwell where Akai Gurley was fatally shot by rookie New York Police Officer Peter Liang.

The stairwell where Akai Gurley was fatally shot by rookie New York Police Officer Peter Liang.

(John Minchillo / Associated Press)

Liang says he was startled by a noise as he opened the stairwell door in the Brooklyn complex, and his gun went off accidentally.

He said he went to look for the bullet and that’s when he discovered Gurley’s girlfriend leaning over him.

Liang recalled saying, “Oh, my God, someone’s hit!” Liang says he called for an ambulance but was also “shocked” and “panicking.”

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Investigators say Liang was holding his flashlight and his gun when he fired a single round in a pitch-black stairwell. The bullet ricocheted and hit Gurley a flight below.

The defense says the fatal shooting was an accident, not a crime, and has argued that the officer didn’t know at first that the bullet had ricocheted off a wall before striking the 28-year-old Gurley.

But prosecutors say Liang handled his weapon recklessly, and they sought to use the testimony of his partner to show that the defendant, even after realizing he’d shot an innocent man, did almost nothing to help him.

The Liang trial is being closely watched by advocates for police accountability, who see it as a counterpoint to decisions by grand juries declining to indict white police officers in other killings of unarmed black men, including those of Eric Garner on Staten Island and Michael Brown in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson.

Liang is Chinese American; Gurley was black.

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