Atatiana Jefferson was killed by a white officer through a window of her home after a concerned neighbour called police.

Black pastors in Fort Worth, Texas, on Wednesday called for federal intervention to stamp out what they called systemic racism in their city’s police force after a white officer shot dead black resident Atatiana Jefferson in her home.

Jefferson’s killing on Saturday by a rookie Fort Worth officer was the latest in a string of fatal shootings that has made the city’s African American community wary of police, said Pastor Kyev Tatum.

He called on Fort Worth to enter a federally binding “consent decree” to overhaul a police force that he said led the nation in police-involved shootings, most of them involving black residents.

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“This is historic and it’s systemic and we understand that racism is at the heart of this,” Tatum, of the New Mount Rose Missionary Baptist Church, told a news conference while flanked by dozens of other pastors and community leaders. “We have lost trust in our police department.”

Black leaders in Fort Worth, the 13th largest US city with around 895,000 residents, said Jefferson’s death fits into a nationwide pattern of police shootings, arrests, and use of tasers that disproportionately affect African Americans.

Jefferson, a 28-year-old pre-med graduate, was shot dead by Officer Aaron Dean through a window of her home after a concerned neighbour asked police to investigate why her front doors were open.

Dean, 34, was arrested on Monday and charged with murder, before being released from jail on a $200,000 bond.

Jefferson was the sixth person to be shot dead by Fort Worth police since June, putting the department on track to be the deadliest in the country, according to her family’s lawyer, Lee Merritt.

Tatum said Jefferson’s death was a familiar situation in a city where police justified excessive force due to “fear for their lives”.

Fort Worth Police Chief Ed Kraus on Tuesday said there was “absolutely no excuse” for Jefferson’s death and that Dean violated a string of police policies.

Fort Worth Mayor Betsy Price pledged that independent experts would investigate police practices after the shooting.

Tatum said the mayor had not included him or other black leaders in her plans and they were requesting US Attorney General William Barr step in and help oversee police reforms.

Under a consent decree, the US Justice Department enters a binding agreement with an official entity, often after finding evidence of wrongdoing. Securing one could prove difficult under a Trump administration that has pushed back against their prior use to reform police departments, citing the burdensome costs.

The US Justice Department and Price’s office did not immediately respond to requests for comment.