St. Louis police officer pleads guilty in killing of fellow officer in deadly gun game privateofficer.org - Latest & Breaking News, Politics, Entertainment News

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Sunday, March 1, 2020

St. Louis police officer pleads guilty in killing of fellow officer in deadly gun game privateofficer.org


Image: Officer Accidental Death

St Louis MO March 1 2020
A former St. Louis police officer, accused of fatally shooting his off-duty colleague while playing a game with a revolver, changed his plea to guilty on Friday.
Nathaniel Hendren had in April pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter and armed criminal action for the Jan. 24, 2019, fatal shooting of Officer Katlyn Alix, who was off duty when she was killed. But Hendren and prosecutors agreed on a guilty plea Friday.
Hendren, who was 29 at the time of the fatal incident, agreed to serve seven years in prison, according to NBC affiliate KSDK.
Alix's mother met with the judge before Hendren's court appearance. Later, during the guilty plea hearing, Hendren apologized to her.
"I hope in some small way it can help heal the brokenness I've caused," Hendren told her.
Hendren and at least one other on-duty officer with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department were in his house with Alix, 24, when she was shot just before 1 a.m.
A probable cause statement said that Hendren and Alix were "playing with firearms when the defendant produced a revolver."
Hendren allegedly emptied the cylinder of the gun and then put one cartridge back into the cylinder, spun the cylinder and pointed the weapon away and pulled the trigger. The revolver did not fire.
Alix then took the gun and pointed it at Hendren and pulled the trigger, according to the probable cause statement. The revolver once again did not fire.
Hendren "took the gun back and pointed it at the victim pulled the trigger causing the gun to discharge," the probable cause statement reads. Alix was shot in the chest.
Hendren and the other officer rushed Alix to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
As police investigated, so did the Circuit Attorney’s Office, as is protocol with police shootings. Hendren was charged the next day.
Circuit Attorney Kim Gardner later sent a letter to the police department, accusing them of using an "obstructionist tactic to prevent us from understanding the state of the officers during the commission of this alleged crime."
She alleged that the police department failed to take blood draws on the involved officers, when "drugs or alcohol may be a contributing factor in a potential crime."




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