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Trial starts in case of fatal shooting over parking spot

By Associated Press
Published: August 21, 2019, 11:23am

CLEARWATER, Fla. — A prosecutor told jurors Wednesday that a white Florida man who fatally shot an unarmed black man during a dispute over a parking space had initiated a similar confrontation just months before, while his defense attorney said the shooting was in self-defense.

Prosecutor Fred Schaub said during opening statements of Michael Drejka’s manslaughter trial in Clearwater that five months before he fatally shot Markeis McGlockton in July 2018, the defendant had threatened another driver about parking in a handicapped parking spot at the same convenience store. That encounter, while heated, didn’t result in a physical altercation.

Five months later, Drejka confronted McGlockton’s girlfriend for parking in a handicapped space. Convenience store video recorded McGlockton leaving the store and shoving Drejka to the ground. Seconds later, Drejka pulled out a handgun and shot the 28-year-old McGlockton as he backed away. McGlockton ran inside the store, where he collapsed and died.

“He took the life of another human being unlawfully without any legal justification and that’s what we’re going to prove to you during the course of this trial,” Schaub said.

Defense attorney Bryant Camareno called the death of McGlockton, a father of three children, “unfortunate.” But the shooting was excusable since Drejka felt threatened by McGlockton’s size and the shove took him by surprise, the defense attorney said.

“Shock, confusion … There was confusion on the part of Mr. Drejka. He had no idea what happened to him,” Camareno said. “The danger may not have been actual. In his state of mind, it’s the appearance of danger that caused him to act.”

McGlockton’s autopsy showed he had the drug ecstasy in his system and the defense attorney suggested that could have led him to act impulsively.

Both the prosecutor and defense attorney promised jurors they would watch the surveillance video many times during the trial, and Camareno played it for them twice during opening statements.

“We want you to look at video in real time,” Camareno said. “We don’t want you to look at it in slow motion because life doesn’t happen in slow motion.”

The first witness prosecutors called was the man Drejka had confronted about parking in a handicapped spot at the same convenience store in February 2018. Richard Kelly, who works at a septic company, testified that Drejka threatened him, but he didn’t brandish any weapon. Drejka told him a relative is handicapped. The argument de-escalated when the convenience store owner came outside and Kelly left.

It’s a personal issue for Mr. Drejka when someone parks in a handicap spot if they’re not handicapped, Camareno told jurors.

Drejka’s trial is expected to last two to three weeks.

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