Porch shooter’s lawyer says he feared for his life

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DETROIT (AP) — A suburban Detroit man who killed an unarmed
woman on his porch was rocked out of sleep by a series of "boom, boom,
boom" pounding sounds outside his home, causing him to grab a shotgun,
open the front door and fire, a defense lawyer told jurors during
opening statements Wednesday.
Theodore Wafer is on trial and
claiming self-defense in the death last year of Renisha McBride, 19, in
Dearborn Heights. But prosecutors have charged the 55-year-old with
second-degree murder, saying there was no reason to use deadly force
instead of calling police.
Defense attorney Cheryl Carpenter
repeatedly told jurors that they need to put themselves in Wafer’s
shoes. Raising and lowering her voice for dramatic effect, she portrayed
him as a man under siege in his own home around 4:30 a.m. on Nov. 2.
Wafer
and McBride didn’t know each other. She ended up on his porch 3 ½ hours
after crashing her car into a parked car about a half-mile away in
Detroit. An autopsy found her blood-alcohol level was about 0.22, which
is nearly three times above Michigan’s legal limit for driving.
Asleep
in his recliner, Wafer heard pounding at a side door — "boom, boom,
boom, boom" — Carpenter said. He dropped to the floor, couldn’t find his
cellphone and then heard more pounding at the front door, she added.
"His
heart is coming out of his chest. … There’s a shadowy figure coming
off the porch and going to the side of the house. He thinks it’s not one
person; it’s two or more people," Carpenter told the jury.
The
banging continued and was so severe that the "floor was shaking, the
picture window was rattling," she said, so Wafer eventually loaded his
shotgun, opened the front door and fired, hitting McBride in the face.
Carpenter
didn’t tell the jury whether Wafer will testify or whether his version
of events will be relayed during the testimony of police officers who
interviewed him extensively after the shooting.
She said a defense expert will testify that Wafer’s screen door was badly damaged by McBride before he
shot through it.
Prosecutor
Danielle Hagaman-Clark said Wafer had other choices when McBride
arrived. She displayed a cheerful picture of the victim on a screen,
followed by a photo of her dead body on the blood-stained porch.
"His actions that night were unnecessary, unjustified and unreasonable," Hagaman-Clark told the
jury.
She said there was no evidence of an attempted break-in, and any damage to the screen was from the
shooting — not McBride.
The
jury heard four witnesses on the first day of testimony, including an
officer who was sent to the home when the shooting was reported. Cpl.
Ruben Gonzalez said Wafer was "absolutely" cooperative and placed
without handcuffs in a squad car.
Carmen Beasley described events
hours before the shooting, recalling how she found McBride bleeding and
pressing her hands to her head after the car crash. McBride walked away
before an ambulance arrived.
"I assumed she was drunk. … She just kept saying she wanted to go home," Beasley said.
It
took two days to pick a jury of seven men and seven women, including
two alternates. Four are black. Judge Dana Hathaway asked them their
views on race, guns and self-defense. McBride was black while Wafer is
white.

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