LONDON — A Black motorist killed by a London police marksman who was acquitted of murder this week was a member of a violent gang and allegedly shot a rival a week earlier, according to court records that were allowed to be published Tuesday.
Jurors were not told about Chris Kaba's gang ties during the trial that ended with Sgt. Martyn Blake being found not guilty Monday in the Central Criminal Court.
Kaba, 24, was shot on Sept. 5, 2022, after ramming police vehicles during a traffic stop. Police did not know who was driving the vehicle, but it was an Audi Q8 that had been used as a getaway car in an unsolved shooting a night earlier.
Blake fired a single round through the windshield of the Audi because he said he thought fellow officers' lives were in danger. Kaba was found to be unarmed.
Prosecutors defended their decision to charge Blake in an exceptionally rare case against a British police officer for a death in the line of duty. They argued at trial that Blake misjudged the risk to his colleagues, exaggerated the threat after the shooting and aimed for Kaba's head. Blake denied those assertions.
A judge had said the details of Kaba's criminal record and alleged involvement in other shootings were irrelevant for jurors to consider in determining whether Blake used unreasonable force. Justice James Goss ordered news media not to report any of those details.
Following the trial, the news media challenged Goss' order, and he lifted the restrictions on the information that had emerged during earlier proceedings.
The Metropolitan Police supported the release of the information to remove any ''misleading impression'' about Kaba's character in the hopes it could quell violence toward officers, particularly on Saturday when an annual demonstration is held in London by family members of people who have died in police custody.