A coroner’s inquest into the killing of an unarmed man during a traffic stop determined on Wednesday that a Montana police officer was justified in the shooting.

A seven-person jury deliberated for about an hour, delivering its decision after Billings police officer Grant Morrison testified that he feared for his life when he fired the three shots that killed Richard Ramirez, 38.

The five-year police veteran said he became convinced the man had a gun after Ramirez reached for his waistband during their 30-second encounter, which occurred last April in a high-crime area of Montana’s largest city.

Police video showed that Morrison repeatedly ordered Ramirez and other occupants of the vehicle to raise their hands. Ramirez’s actions were largely obscured in the video, but Morrison said Ramirez dropped his left hand to his side – out of the officer’s view – and “started to jiggle it up and down”.

“I knew in that moment, which later was determined to be untrue, but I knew in that moment that he was reaching for a gun,” Morrison said. “I couldn’t take that risk … I wanted to see my son grow up.”

The night before his death, Ramirez was named as a suspect in a drug-involved robbery and shooting across town in Billings, Montana’s largest city. Morrison said that was a “huge contributing factor” in how he handled the traffic stop.

Morrison shot and killed another man in 2013. He was cleared of any wrongdoing in that case.

During prior testimony, a Billings police detective who investigated the case said Ramirez might have been trying to stash something when he was shot. A small amount of methamphetamine and a syringe later were found near Ramirez’s seat.

Morrison, a five-year police veteran, said he had extensive prior interactions with Ramirez’s family prior to the shooting, visiting their residence or otherwise encountering family members 15 to 20 times over the course of his career.

The officer said he had met Ramirez himself face-to-face at least once, when he found Ramirez in a parked vehicle behind his family residence with some associates. The encounter led to a drug investigation, Morrison said, but he couldn’t recall the outcome.

Recent police shootings of unarmed suspects in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York City have heightened scrutiny of law enforcement nationwide.

Ramirez’s family wanted criminal charges against Morrison and said the half-Mexican Ramirez was a victim of racial profiling. They said they intend to file a lawsuit in the case.

Younger sister Renee Ramirez criticized the inquest as one-sided and said testimony that her brother was a drug user and high on methamphetamine at the time of this death was irrelevant.



“I don’t care what things my brother did in the past,” she said. “What does that have to do with shooting my brother?”