Prosecutors rested their case last week after only two days of testimonies in the stun gun death trial of Eurie Lee Martin after a former Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) agent skilled in “use-of-force” testified that the 58-year-old had not committed a crime that warranted law enforcement officers to even stop him the day he died.
Since the 2017 incident, the three former Washington County Sheriff’s deputies involved, Henry Lee Copeland, Michael Howell and Rhett Scott, all of whom are white, have maintained that Martin had physically threatened them after allegedly Illegally walking in the roadway.
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However, a nearly hourlong evidence footage of the fatal arrest failed to corroborate those claims.
The GBI agent, John Durden, told jurors that the trio shouldn’t have stopped and detained Martin, a reported schizophrenic who briefly stopped at the home of Cyrus Harris for a drink of water during an over 20-mile journey from Milledgeville to Sandersville during an extremely hot day in July, according to news outlet WSAV.
“I don’t think there was a crime, enough to stop him for reasonable suspicion,” Durden concluded as reported by several local news stations.
When asked by prosecutor Kelly Weathers “Was Eurie Martin constitutionally entitled to keep walking in your opinion?” Dureden responded, “Yes,” though he agreed Martin had crossed the white line from the shoulder into the roadway, based on photos presented by the defense.
Deputy Howell encountered Martin after the resident of a home, Cyrus Harris, had refused Martin water and later placed a call with dispatchers stating, “I got a guy walking off the side of the road here, just walked in my yard. I don’t know where he was crazy, drunk or what.”
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