Kimberly Potter's attorneys acknowledge that the former Brooklyn Center officer killed Daunte Wright last April when she reached for her handgun instead of her Taser and fired a single shot into his chest.
But as jury selection for Potter's manslaughter trial in the 20-year-old Black man's death nears, their defense lies within the veteran police officer's lack of intent. They say her miscalculation, grave as it was, should not equal a prison sentence.
"Officer Potter's regret is abundantly clear on the body camera videos and will be with her the rest of her life," her attorney, Paul Engh, said. "But hers was an innocent mistake. An accident is not a crime."
"Innocent accident" and "innocent mistake," will be themes in Potter's defense when the trial, expected to be watched across the country, begins at the end of this month. The state initially charged Potter with second-degree manslaughter, which requires a finding that she acted with "culpable negligence" in Wright's death. In September, Attorney General Keith Ellison added the more serious charge of first-degree manslaughter, defined as "recklessly" causing Wright's death. The complaint against Potter cited the "substantial amount of training, including training related to use of force and, specifically, to the use of Tasers and firearms."
Despite her experience, Engh and his co-counsel, Earl Gray, say that mistakes can still be made. They plan to call Laurence Miller, a forensic and police psychologist based in Florida, to testify on "slip and capture errors," the notion that a more common action, such as deploying a firearm, can override a less common action, such as deploying a Taser.

Potter's 26-year career as a police officer ended in the tumultuous days that followed Wright's death. Today, she is preparing for the start of her trial. In a recent interview in her attorney's office, she cried while describing how she has spent much of the past six months struggling with the events of that day.
"I'm a good person, and I valued him in life," Potter said of Wright. "The aftermath of that day has destroyed me. I pray for him every day. I pray for the Wright family every day."
Mistake or not, Potter must be held accountable, prosecutors said. Ellison said Wright's killing is another example of badly needed police reform.