Eight years after a grand jury cleared police of wrongdoing, three Minneapolis officers who were on the scene of the fatal shooting of Terrance Franklin have retained attorneys and two of them are in talks with Hennepin County prosecutors over immunity from potential charges in exchange for new information about what happened that day, according to sources familiar with the case.
Minneapolis police SWAT officers shot 22-year-old Franklin 10 times in the basement of a home in Uptown on May 10, 2013, including multiple times in the head. Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman announced a few months later that a grand jury had declined to indict the officers in the shooting. "That means that they did not find sufficient evidence to reach the standard of probable cause that any criminal charge is warranted in the death of Mr. Franklin," Freeman said in a news conference in September 2013. "The criminal process is now completed." Some of the officers involved in the shooting have since left the force.
Since the police murder of George Floyd, activists have pushed to reopen investigations into Franklin and other people killed by Minneapolis police, and an exposé from TIME this summer resurfaced unanswered questions related to the shooting.
"The Franklin case continues to be under review by our office and there is much work to be done," said Lacey Severins, a spokeswoman for Freeman's office, when asked for records related to the 2013 determination to not charge. "A final decision is not imminent."
Severins would not comment on the Star Tribune's reporting Monday. "The Hennepin County Attorney's Office does not comment on ongoing investigations," she said.
Tasha Zerna, a spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office, also declined to comment on whether federal prosecutors are involved in talks with the officers.
After the TIME article came out, Freeman said audio from a witness video and a new explanation for how Franklin's DNA ended up on an officer's weapon were among reasons for the BCA to reopen the case. The BCA declined to reinvestigate, saying that Freeman's request only referenced "potential new evidence."
BCA Superintendent Drew Evans wrote in a July response that the bureau met with Minneapolis police, the Minneapolis City Attorney's Office and Franklin family attorney Mike Padden, and none had new evidence sufficient to reopen an investigation.