If Daunte Wright had stopped 'he would be with us,' defense says
"All he has to do is stop and he would be with us," defense attorney Paul Engh told jurors. "She can't let him leave because he's going to kill her partner."
When Daunte Wright was being arrested, he freed himself from the officers' grip and tried to get back in his vehicle.
The defense argued that she meant to pull out and shoot her stun gun but instead, she accidentally pulled out her firearm.
Engh argued that Kim Potter was pulling out her stun gun with the intention of stopping Wright from driving away. He said that her partner, Sgt. Michael Johnson, was partially in the car. Engh said that Potter knew that if Wright drove away, Johnson would've been dragged alongside the vehicle.
Fleeing an officer is a "dangerous felony," Engh said. "It's a crime of violence."