"Our officers will continue to have to make split-second decisions so that we can all remain safe and so we can all go home and so they can go home," McMurray said, asking for an acquittal on both theories of manslaughter.

She said the PCP found in Crutcher's system, along with information she later learned about his legal history, only confirmed Shelby's on-scene analysis that he was a threat, but she said him being unarmed made Shelby feel worse, not better, about shooting him.

But as soon as McMurray took her seat at the defense counsel's table, Gray said "I honestly can't believe" she represented Crutcher's position in the still image as being the reason Shelby shot Crutcher, who showed no weapon and did not threaten her.

He told the jury the timestamp on the image is five seconds after the shot was fired, saying the photo instead matched the testimony of Shelby's backing officer, Tyler Turnbough, who told the jury he deployed an electric current from his Taser twice because the first five-second round was not effective at getting Crutcher to comply.