Michigan officer on trial tells jurors he feared for his life before killing African immigrant

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Former Grand Rapids Police officer Christopher Schurr sits in court during the second day of his trial at the Kent County Courthouse in Grand Rapids, Mich., Tuesday, April 29, 2025. Schurr is charged with second-degree murder in the fatal shooting of Patrick Lyoya, a 26-year-old Congolese immigrant during a traffic stop on April 4, 2022. (WOOD-TV via AP, Pool)

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. – A Michigan police officer who killed a man with a shot to the back of the head testified in his own defense Friday, telling jurors at his second-degree murder trial that he was ā€œrunning on fumesā€ and fearing for his life after losing his Taser during an intense fight.

ā€œI believed that if I hadn’t done it at that time, I wasn’t going to go home,ā€ said Christopher Schurr, who fired the single fatal shot as he pinned Patrick Lyoya facedown on the ground in an effort to subdue him.

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Schurr, 34, wiped his eyes and sniffed as body camera video was played for the jurors. His testimony was his first public explanation of what happened following a routine traffic stop on a cold, rainy spring morning in Grand Rapids in 2022.

The shooting stunned the public after the Grand Rapids police chief released video of the killing, which was recorded by a man who was accompanying Lyoya that day. There also was police car video and images from Schurr's body camera.

Schurr told the jury that it was "important to get my side of the story out.ā€

Jurors must decide whether Schurr, who was working alone, could have reasonably feared that he could suffer great bodily harm or be killed after Lyoya got control of his Taser, a weapon that fires electrically charged probes to temporarily subdue an aggressor.

Lyoya, a Black man, failed to produce a driver’s license after Schurr pulled him over for driving a car with a mismatched license plate. Then he ran, and the officer chased and tackled him. As they physically struggled to exhaustion for more than two minutes, Schurr was heard desperately asking for officers to rush to the scene.

ā€œI’m running on fumes,ā€ he explained to the jury.

Video shows the confrontation finally ended when Schurr fired into Lyoya’s head after repeatedly demanding that Lyoya stop resisting and give up the Taser, which the officer had lost control of in the fight.

Outside the courthouse Friday, a crowd waved ā€œthin blue lineā€ flags in support of Schurr while standing along a busy downtown street. Inside, his family as well as Lyoya's relatives watched the testimony.

Schurr was fired by city officials at the recommendation of police Chief Eric Winstrom after he was charged in 2022. At the time, Winstrom said his recommendation was based on video of the encounter, the prosecutor’s review of a state police investigation and Schurr’s interview with internal investigators.

The trial in Grand Rapids has mostly been a battle of experts.

Use-of-force experts testifying for the prosecutor said deadly force was not necessary to end the conflict. But several senior Grand Rapids officers, summoned by defense lawyers, said Schurr was at great risk when Lyoya got ahold of the Taser.

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White reported from Detroit.


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