Grand Jury Indicts Dallas Cop for Shooting Young Mother to Death
A grand jury has indicted Dallas police officer Christopher Hess on charges of aggravated assault for the shooting death of 21–year–old mother of two Genevive Dawes in January. It is the first time in 44 years that a district attorney has successfully indicted a Dallas police officer involved in a fatal shooting.
In the early morning hours of Jan. 18, Dawes was asleep with her boyfriend, Virgilio Rosales, in an SUV she recently had purchased. Dawes didn’t know it, but the SUV had been reported stolen when she bought it.
According to local media reports, Dawes was frightened as officer Hess and his partner, Jason Kimpel, approached the vehicle at about 5 a.m., and she put the SUV in reverse. With the vehicle moving backward at about 5 miles per hour, Hess and his partner opened fire, shooting 14 times, according to a civil rights lawsuit filed by the family against the city and the officers involved.
Dawes was struck four times across her body and died later at a local hospital. According to the investigation, Hess fired 13 of the shots and Kimpel, who has not been charged, fired one. An arrest warrant was issued for Hess, police announced on Friday, adding that the officer would turn himself in on Monday. In the meantime, he has been placed on administrative leave.