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Former Dallas Police Officer Amber Guyger Appeals Botham Jean Murder Conviction

Woman in lavender shirt testifies in a courtroom. She is emotional.
Tom Fox
/
The Dallas Morning News via Associated Press
Fired Dallas police officer Amber Guyger becomes emotional as she testifies in her 2019 murder trial in Dallas.

Former Dallas police officer Amber Guyger is asking a Texas appeals court to throw out her murder conviction for the killing of Botham Jean in his apartment in 2018.

Her attorneys argue that state appeals court judges should acquit her of murder, saying the evidence was legally insufficient to prove murder beyond a reasonable doubt. They offered the possibility to convict Guyger of 鈥渃riminally negligent homicide,鈥 which carries a lighter sentence, instead.

Guyger says she entered Jean's apartment because she mistook it for her own, which was one floor below. She quickly shot and killed him. A jury convicted her of the murder, and she鈥檚 currently serving a 10.

Guyger's attorney, Michael Mowla, argued at a hearing on Tuesday that although Guyger admitted to killing Jean, she shot him because of a reasonable mistake of fact.

"Yes, she intended to pull the trigger. Yes, she intended to kill who she thought was an intruder in her home," he said.

That mistake, Mowla continued, means Guyger did not have "evil intent."

The three judges, at different points, questioned Mowla's arguments.

"Just because of her alleged mistaken belief about where she was, doesn't negate her intent to kill," said Justice Robbie Partida-Kipness.

Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot, , said the mistake-of-fact defense and the self-defense argument are separate, and Guyger cannot 鈥渟hoe-horn鈥 one into the other.

鈥淸Guyger] intended to cause Botham鈥檚 death. That鈥檚 murder,鈥 Creuzot argued.

Prosecutor Doug Gladden brought that argument to Tuesday's hearing.

"It's not negligent. It's not mistake-of-fact. It's not justified," he said.

Jean, an employee of the accounting firm PricewaterhouseCoopers, was 26 years old.

The court did not specify when it would make a decision on Guyger's appeal.

The proceedings were livestreamed. You can watch them in the player below.

Got a tip? Email Bret Jaspers at bjaspers@kera.org. You can follow Bret on Twitter .

Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org. You can follow Miranda on Twitter .

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Bret Jaspers is a reporter for 四虎影院. His stories have aired nationally on the BBC, NPR鈥檚 newsmagazines, and APM鈥檚 Marketplace. He collaborated on the series Cash Flows, which won a 2020 Sigma Delta Chi award for Radio Investigative Reporting. He's a member of Actors' Equity, the professional stage actors union.
Miranda Suarez is an award-winning reporter who started at 四虎影院 in 2020. Before joining 鈥淣TX Now,鈥 she covered Tarrant County government, with a focus on deaths in the local jail. Her work drives discussion at local government meetings and has led to real-world change 鈥 like the closure of a West Texas private prison that violated the state鈥檚 safety standards. A Massachusetts native, Miranda got her start in journalism at WTBU, Boston University鈥檚 student radio station. She later worked at WBUR as a business desk fellow, and while reporting for Boston 25 News, she received a New England Emmy nomination for her investigation into mental鈥慼ealth counseling services at Massachusetts colleges and universities.