Texas Grand Jury To Consider Charges In Shooting Death Of Protester Garrett Foster Last Summer

AUSTIN, Texas (CBSDFW.COM/AP) - A grand jury will consider whether to bring charges against a man who drove into a crowd demonstrating in Austin against police violence last July and shot and killed an armed protester, prosecutors said Friday, April 16.

Travis County District Attorney José Garza announced the move in a statement without identifying the man who shot Garrett Foster, 28.

Garrett Foster and his fiancee Whitney Mitchell (credit: GoFundMe)

The man's attorneys have identified him as Army Sgt. Daniel Perry, a Fort Hood soldier, whom they say was working for a ride-share company and acted in self-defense after Foster pointed a gun at him.

"Coming to a decision in these kinds of cases can be particularly challenging, and we are grateful to the grand jury for their service and commitment to considering all evidence and law," Garza said.

Foster was killed during a night of protests and unrest in several U.S. cities. In the immediate aftermath, then-Police Chief Brian Manley said officers heard "two separate volleys of gunfire" and made their way to the crowd, where they found Foster with multiple gunshot wounds.

Perry's attorneys told the AP in July that their client had just dropped off a rider when he turned onto a street filled with protesters who began beating on his vehicle.

They said that Foster approached the car and motioned with his gun for Perry to lower his window.

Perry initially thought Foster worked in law enforcement and put his window down, they said.

But when Foster raised his weapon toward Perry, the soldier realized Foster was not a police officer and shot him in self-defense with a handgun in his car, the attorneys said.

In a statement Friday, Perry's attorneys said they have confidence that "when grand jurors ask themselves what they would do in the split second following a person raising an assault rifle toward them, we are confident the grand jury will conclude that Sgt. Perry's actions of self-defense were justified."

(© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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