Two teenagers were on a violent crime spree last summer while fleeing in a stolen car when a Minneapolis police officer pursuing them hit an SUV with his squad and killed the driver, according to newly-filed court documents.
The disclosure came in defense filings made this week in Hennepin County District Court on behalf of Officer Brian Cummings in an attempt to have second-degree manslaughter and criminal vehicular homicide charges dismissed against him. Cummings was placed on leave after the July 6 high-speed collision at a north Minneapolis intersection that killed 40-year-old Leneal Frazier of St. Paul.
Cummings, 38, left the Minneapolis police in October, the day after the charges were filed. City officials Friday declined to say whether he resigned or was fired.
Defense attorney Thomas Plunkett argued in his dismissal motion that Cummings' pursuit of the two suspects was "consistent with [police] department policies" at the time and that his client "has been singled out for prosecution for a political purpose. ... The defense intends to offer credible evidence that [other officers] similarly situated were not prosecuted."
A hearing is scheduled before Judge Tamara Garcia on Thursday, when Plunkett's motion for dismissal will be taken up.

The Hennepin County Attorney's Office issued a statement Friday saying it will file a written response to the defense's motions and release it to the public.
"Suffice to say for now that these motions are completely without any basis in the facts or in the law and thus will be vigorously opposed," the statement read. "Our office will not allow the personal nature of these motions to deflect attention away from the criminal behavior underlying this case: that the defendant was driving through a residential area after midnight at speeds exceeding 90 mph, which resulted in the tragic death of an innocent man."
Prosecutors say that Cummings was driving 90 miles per hour on residential streets when he ran a red light and entered the intersection of N. Lyndale and 41st avenues just as Frazier's Jeep was crossing it. Cummings struck the driver's side of the Jeep at about 78 mph, according to the charges.