A divided Minnesota Court of Appeals on Monday upheld the murder conviction of former Minneapolis officer Mohamed Noor in the 2017 shooting death of an Australian woman who called 911 to report a possible sexual assault in the alley behind her house.
Noor's actions met the legal threshold for a "depraved mind" when he shot Justine Ruszczyk Damond from inside his patrol vehicle in southwest Minneapolis, Judges Louise Dovre Bjorkman and Michelle Larkin ruled.
Judge Matthew Johnson, however, disagreed, saying he would have reversed Noor's murder conviction and sent his case for sentencing on the lesser second-degree manslaughter charge.
Noor's attorney immediately said he would ask the state Supreme Court to consider the case, although the court is not required to hear it.
Noor, who is serving a 12½-year prison sentence, challenged his third-degree murder conviction, a charge generally reserved for defendants in overdose deaths.
He became the first on-duty Minneapolis police officer convicted of murder when the charge was applied to him for "perpetuating an act eminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved mind."
In the appeal, Noor's attorney Thomas Plunkett argued that the depraved mind element wasn't fulfilled because Noor was carrying out his duties as an officer, acted in a split second and directed his actions at a specific person.
"We respectfully disagree with the majority's opinion published today in Mr. Noor's appeal," Plunkett said Monday in a written statement. "The split decision, while disappointing, is not entirely disheartening. The dissenting opinion raises compelling issues."