Two Law Enforcement Officers Indicted In Death Of Man Shot 76 Times
“Eric Heinze, an assistant chief inspector with the U.S. Marshal’s Southeast Regional Fugitive Task Force, and Kristopher Hutchens, a Clayton County police officer working with the task force, were formally charged with felony murder”
By US~Observer Staff
East Point, GA — On October 26, 2021, a grand jury returned an eight-count indictment against two law enforcement officers in connection with the 2016 killing of a man shot 76 times during an attempted arrest in the Atlanta area.
According to court documents, Eric Heinze, an assistant chief inspector with the U.S. Marshal’s Southeast Regional Fugitive Task Force, and Kristopher Hutchens, a Clayton County police officer working with the task force, were formally charged with felony murder, aggravated assault, burglary, making false statements and violation of oath by a public officer. Heinze and Hutchens were booked and released on Nov. 3 according to the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office. A 10% surety or property bond for $50,000 was granted by the court. A medical examiner’s report said Jamarion Robinson, 26, was shot 76 times by police on Aug. 5, 2016, when officers tried to enter his apartment. Law enforcement believed Robinson was the man responsible for pointing a gun at Atlanta officers and fleeing, according to authorities.
Attorney Gerald Griggs, who is close with Robinson’s family, said the family celebrated the decision, which they’ve been waiting on for five years.
According to news reports, a U.S. Marshals Service spokesman has said officers were attempting to serve warrants on Robinson issued by Atlanta police and Gwinnett County police in the Atlanta suburbs. A private detective hired by Robinson’s mother, Monteria Robinson, uncovered evidence of gunshots fired straight into the ground where her son’s body was lying. Robinson had been a college football player at Clark Atlanta University and Tuskegee University, and had no criminal convictions.
There is no body-camera video of the shooting because at the time of this shooting, federal policies did not allow U.S. Marshals or local police officers assisting them to wear body cameras. Cell phone video from outside the apartment where the shooting took place captured nearly three minutes of gunfire.
Robinson’s family said their son, who suffered from mental illness, was at his girlfriend’s house when 16 officers broke down the door. “Over 90 rounds were fired at my son, flash-bang grenades were thrown at him, landed on him burning him. Somebody walked up the stairs, stood over him, and shot down into his body two more times. After that he was handcuffed and drug down a flight of stairs,” Monteria Robinson said at a news conference in June 2020.
It was reported that former Fulton County district attorney, Paul Howard, said the investigation into the case was blocked by the officers’ refusal to cooperate and the absence of body camera footage. But when Howard lost his position to Fani Willis, the new district attorney promised swifter action.