Ex-Atlanta policeman charged in Brooks' death freed from jail - TV
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[July 01, 2020]
By Rich McKay
ATLANTA (Reuters) - The former Atlanta
police officer charged in last month's death of Rayshard Brooks, which
touched off days of anti-racism protests, has been released from jail on
bail, local television station WSB TV and other media reported.
A Georgia County judge on Tuesday set bond for Garrett Rolfe, 27, at
$500,000 and added numerous conditions including that he has to wear an
ankle monitor and obey a curfew.
Rolfe left jail early on Wednesday, media reported.
Representatives for the jail, police, Rolfe and Brooks' family were not
immediately available for comment.
The white policeman is charged with felony murder and 10 other offenses
in the shooting of Brooks, a 27-year-old Black man, at a Wendy's parking
lot in south Atlanta.
At a hearing on Tuesday, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Jane Barwick
said she would allow Rolfe to be freed from jail while awaiting trial
because she did not believe the former officer was a danger to the
community or a flight risk.
Brooks' June 12 death exacerbated tensions around the United States over
police brutality and racism stoked by the killing of George Floyd in
police custody in Minneapolis on May 25.
Surveillance and cellphone video of the Atlanta shooting was widely
viewed on social media, triggering sometimes violent demonstrations and
the burning of the fast-food restaurant.
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Former Atlanta Police Department officer Garrett Rolfe, who was
fired after the shooting death of 27-year-old Rayshard Brooks, poses
in a jail booking photograph in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. June 18,
2020. Fulton County Sheriff's Office/Handout via REUTERS
At Tuesday's hearing, before the judge gave her decision, Brooks'
widow Tomika Miller asked the court to deny bond, saying she would
not feel safe with the former officer free.
"I say no because mentally I'm not able to handle it. I don't feel
safe with him out there," she said.
Rolfe's attorneys had said they intended to present strong evidence
asserting he was legally justified in using deadly force because he
was acting in self-defense. Rolfe was fired from the police and had
been held at the Gwinnett County jail.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Louise Heavens and
Andrew Cawthorne)
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