Crime & Safety
Ex-Minneapolis Cop Mohamed Noor Gets New Prison Sentence
Mohamed Noor was resentenced Thursday after the Minnesota Supreme Court threw out his third-degree murder conviction.

MINNEAPOLIS — A former Minneapolis police officer was resentenced Thursday to nearly five years in prison for the 2017 fatal shooting of a woman who had called 911 to report a disturbance behind her home.
Mohamed Noor was resentenced to 57 months in the shooting of Justine Ruszczyk Damond.
The sentence is the maximum allowed under the state's guidelines for manslaughter in the second degree.
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Noor was given credit for the 29 months he has already served. And in Minnesota, prisoners can be released on good behavior after serving 2/3 of their sentence, which means Noor is likely to be released in about eight months.
In 2019, Noor was found guilty of second-degree manslaughter and third-degree murder. But Noor faced resentencing in Hennepin County Court after the Minnesota Supreme Court overturned his third-degree murder conviction in September.
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Noor, 36, was originally sentenced to serve a 12.5-year prison sentence when he was first convicted in 2019.
The state Supreme Court ruling found that a 3rd-degree murder charge did not apply in Noor's case. Here is the state's definition for third-degree murder:
609.195 MURDER IN THE THIRD DEGREE.
(a) Whoever, without intent to effect the death of any person, causes the death of another by perpetrating an act eminently dangerous to others and evincing a depraved mind, without regard for human life, is guilty of murder in the third degree and may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 25 years.
(b) Whoever, without intent to cause death, proximately causes the death of a human being by, directly or indirectly, unlawfully selling, giving away, bartering, delivering, exchanging, distributing, or administering a controlled substance classified in Schedule I or II, is guilty of murder in the third degree and may be sentenced to imprisonment for not more than 25 years or to payment of a fine of not more than $40,000, or both.
Read the court's opinion below:
"We are disappointed that the Minnesota Supreme Court chose to reverse the third-degree murder conviction of Mohamed Noor," Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman said in a statement in September.
"The court overruled prior case law supporting the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office charging decision and we disagree with their analysis of the law. However, we respect and acknowledge that the Minnesota Supreme Court is the final arbiter in this matter. Accordingly, we must and do accept this result. The court’s decision leaves intact the Manslaughter II guilty verdict by the jury against Mohamed Noor. Further, the Supreme Court notes in its opinion that Mohammed Noor has conceded that the evidence at trial was sufficient to support his conviction of second-degree manslaughter. His conviction was just. The case has been remanded to the trial court for sentencing and we will seek the maximum sentence possible."
Damond was killed on the night of July 15, 2017, minutes after she made a 911 call to report a disturbance behind her Minneapolis home. She lived on Washburn Avenue South with her fiancé, Don Damond, 50, whom she had planned to marry in August 2017, one month after the shooting occurred.
Transcripts released by the city of Minneapolis show how Damond spent her final moments attempting to help a stranger she believed was possibly being raped.
"Hi, I'm, I can hear someone out the back and I, I'm not sure if she's having sex or being raped," she told a police dispatch at 11:27 p.m. on July 15, 2017. "It sounds like sex noises, but it's been going on for a while and I think she tried to say help and it sounds distressed."
A second transcript shows Damond calling 911 back to confirm police were on their way.
Officers Matthew Harrity and his partner Noor responded to the call.
Harrity drove their squad car into the alley on 50th Street. He turned off the headlights and dimmed the computer screen as they drove down the alley, but used his spotlight to look for people on the driver's side of the car, according to the criminal complaint.
The officers did not encounter anyone while driving through the alley. Noor entered "Code 4" into the squad computer, which communicates to dispatch they were safe and needed no assistance.
Five to ten seconds later, Harrity heard a voice as well as "a thump" somewhere behind him on the squad car, and caught a glimpse of a person's head and shoulders outside his window. He could not see whether the person was a man or woman.
He said he perceived his life was in danger, reached for his gun, unholstered it, and held it to his ribcage while pointing it downward. He said that from the driver's seat he had a better vantage point to determine a threat than Noor would have had from the passenger seat.
Harrity then heard a sound that sounded like a "light bulb dropping on the floor" and saw a flash. After first checking to see if he had been shot, he looked to his right and saw Noor with his right arm extended in the direction of Harrity, according to the criminal complaint.
Outside the squad car, Damond put her hands on a gunshot wound and said either "I'm dying" or "I'm dead," the complaint states. She died at the scene.
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