06-10-2004, 03:26 PM
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Annelid wrangler
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Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Fountain Hills, AZ
Posts: 4,932
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Interesting local trial: cop arrested, charged with murder
We have another very interesting trial going on here. A police officer shot and killed a woman (35, upper middle class, 2 year old baby in back seat) who threatened his life with her vehicle. It was later determined that he shot her after she had past him and he had successfully avoided the vehicle. He was terminated and charged with second degree murder.
Quote:
The Arizona Republic
MESA - John "Colby" Nelson of Ahwatukee bottles up his emotions as he relives his wife's death daily during the second-degree murder trial of Dan Lovelace.
But while it's painful to view autopsy photos and hear a defense attorney describe his wife, Dawn, as a criminal, Colby says it's also helpful to learn more details of her Oct. 11, 2002, death at the hands of the now-fired Chandler police officer.
"You're finding out what happened that day. It helps with closure," he said. "I'm glad the trial has started. It's been two years. He needs to answer for his actions."
No one disputes that Lovelace, 39, fatally shot Dawn Nelson, 35, as she attempted to flee from the drive-through window of a Walgreens drugstore with her 14-month-old son, Kenneth, in a rear car seat.
Prosecutor Vince Imbordino argues that Lovelace had no justification to kill Nelson, who was suspected of prescription-drug fraud. He accuses Lovelace of second-degree murder and endangerment.
But defense attorney Craig Mehrens argues that Lovelace was doing his job and shot Nelson in self-defense to stop her from running him over or crushing him against a building.
Six witnesses testified Tuesday, including Wendy Bagley, a Chandler mother who took her 4-year-old son to a doctor that day and drove to Walgreens to pick up a prescription.
Bagley testified that she saw Nelson's white Chevrolet Camaro move forward from the drive-through lane and hit Lovelace's motorcycle, which was parked in front of Nelson's car. The Camaro first nudged the motorcycle before knocking it over, she said.
"I stopped and he stepped off the median," Bagley said. "He yelled, 'Stop,' something like that. Then he took off after the car."
Bagley said she saw Lovelace run for two to three steps toward the Camaro, but then lost sight of both the car and the officer, her vision obscured. Bagley said she heard two or three shots, but attorneys said during opening statements that Lovelace fired only once.
When questioned by Mehrens, Bagley said she was scared and frightened when the Camaro started moving, fearful that Nelson would plow into her car as she drove by.
She said she drove around the drive-through lanes to avoid injury.
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