The trial of a former St. Louis police officer charged with what prosecutors have described as the calculated killing of a 24-year-old man six years ago will begin Monday.
Prosecutors allege that Jason Stockley, 36, was recorded on an internal camera during a high-speed pursuit saying he intended to kill Anthony Lamar Smith, before shooting him five times on Dec. 20, 2011.
Initial police reports said officers approached Smith, who was apparently involved in a drug deal behind a restaurant north of downtown St. Louis, when he fled, according to court documents
obtained by NBC affiliate KSDK.
At one point, the station reported, Stockley could be heard in the video saying he was "going to kill this [expletive] — don't you know it."
When Smith's car slowed, prosecutors said later, Stockley instructed his partner, who was driving their SUV, to ram Smith's car.
"Stockley then approached Smith's car on the driver's side and shot five times into the car, striking the victim Anthony Smith with each shot," former St. Louis Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce said last year.
Stockley, who had been with the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department for four years, told internal affairs investigators that he believed Smith was reaching for a handgun,
according to police reports obtained by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
But Joyce said the only gun found in Smith's car bore Stockley's DNA.
Homicide detectives later determined that the shooting was justifiable, although federal and internal affairs investigations continued.