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Ex-Louisville Cop Pleads Guilty To Charges In Death Of Armed Chef Shot By National Guard During 2020 Riots

Louisville, KY – Former Louisville Metropolitan Police Department (LMPD) Officer Katie Crews pleaded guilty to federal charges last week in connection with the death of 53-year-old David McAtee during the 2020 riots.

In accordance with a plea agreement the former officer made with the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), Crews pleaded guilty to deprivation of civil rights under the color of law in federal court on Oct. 11, WLKY reported.

Under the terms of her plea deal, the former officer agreed to surrender all of her law enforcement licenses in Kentucky and promised not to seek employment in law enforcement in the future.

The judge scheduled Crews’ sentencing for Jan. 30, 2023, according to WLKY.

She was facing up to 10 years behind bars ahead of the plea agreement.

Crews is the only person who has been charged in connection with McAtee’s death, WLKY reported.

Federal prosecutors claimed the former Louisville police officer caused the exchange of gunfire that ensued between the National Guard and a local business owner that left McAtee dead.

The incident occurred at about 12:15 a.m. on June 1, 2020 when police and National Guard were sent to break up a crowd in the parking lot of Dino’s Food Mart at 26th and Broadway, WLKY reported.

The entire city was under an emergency curfew that went into effect at 9 p.m. following nights of rioting in the wake of George Floyd’s death a week earlier in the custody of the Minneapolis police.

Now-former Louisville Metropolitan Police Department (LMPD) Chief Steve Conrad said a crowd was gathered in the parking lot hours after the city’s emergency curfew began on May 31, NBC News reported.

He said officers and soldiers were attempting to disperse the gathering when someone in the crowd opened fire on them, according to WLKY.

Cell phone video filmed by a bystander showed soldiers and police taking cover behind vehicles as the crowd screamed and ran.

Officers and soldiers returned fire and McAtee was fatally shot, WLKY reported.

McAtee’s mother told the Courier Journal that her 53-year-old son owned a barbecue business next door to Dino’s Food Mart.

The popular chef was active in his community and many community leaders joined the vigils mourning his death and spoke out against the Louisville police.

Police released surveillance videos from inside McAtee’s kitchen and from a camera on the exterior of the building that showed the timing of what happened.

The video showed that when police and National Guard arrived to clear the people gathered next door, a group of people ran into the kitchen of McAtee’s restaurant, Yaya’s BBQ, to hide.

Security video from inside the kitchen at Yaya’s BBQ showed that as people rushed in through the door, McAtee rushed to get outside.

He pushed his way through oncoming people to the doorway and shoved a woman standing in the threshold out of harm’s way, the video showed.

And then the video showed McAtee stepped into the open doorway, raised his right hand, and fired a gun in the direction of the activity outside.

Then he stepped back into the kitchen for about five seconds before he stepped out again, the video showed.

The second time he went out the door and appeared to raise his arm to fire on officers, McAtee was struck by return fire.

Court documents showed that LMPD Officer Katie Crews had been ordered to help break up the crowd at Yaya’s, WAVE reported.

Officer Crews told investigators that the woman in the doorway of the restaurant – later identified as McAtee’s niece, Machelle McAtee – refused to go inside after she was ordered to do so by officers, WDRB reported.

“She was standing in, I don’t want to say, an aggressive manner, but as a manner that she was not going to go inside,” the officer told investigators during an interview on June 5, 2020.

“After giving verbal commands, I did shoot more pepper balls in her direction,” Officer Crews said. “She still refused, so I did shoot off more non-lethal pepper balls in her direction.”

The indictment said Officer Crews “fired a pepperball at M.M., striking M.M., while M.M. was standing on private property and not posing a threat to the defendant or others,” WDRB reported.

“Whenever people were not going inside the building or making an effort to move, I did shoot off one round of non-lethal pepper ball onto the ground,” Officer Crews told investigators.

She was charged with the federal civil rights crime of depravation of rights under color of law, WDRB reported.

Written by
Sandy Malone

Managing Editor - Twitter/@SandyMalone_ - Prior to joining The Police Tribune, Sandy wrote the Politics.Net column for the Wall Street Journal and was managing editor of Campaigns & Elections magazine. More recently, she was an internationally-syndicated columnist for Conde Nast (BRIDES), The Huffington Post, and Monsters and Critics. Sandy is married to a retired police captain and former SWAT commander.

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Written by Sandy Malone

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