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Reading: Attorneys lay out ultimate arguments as Christopher Schurr's case in dying of Patrick Lyoya goes to jury
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Michigan Post > Blog > Michigan > Attorneys lay out ultimate arguments as Christopher Schurr's case in dying of Patrick Lyoya goes to jury
Michigan

Attorneys lay out ultimate arguments as Christopher Schurr's case in dying of Patrick Lyoya goes to jury

By Editorial Board Published May 6, 2025 7 Min Read
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Attorneys lay out ultimate arguments as Christopher Schurr's case in dying of Patrick Lyoya goes to jury

GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. (WOOD) — The jury within the homicide trial of former Grand Rapids Police Division Officer Christopher Schurr has begun deliberating his destiny within the April 2022 killing of Patrick Lyoya.

The 12-member jury — 10 whites, one Hispanic and a girl who recognized herself as biracial — began deliberations at 12:40 p.m. Monday. They broke for the day earlier than 5 p.m. and have been anticipated to be again to work Tuesday morning.

Jurors got three selections: Responsible of second-degree homicide, responsible of voluntary manslaughter or not responsible of something.

The decide allowed the manslaughter choice over the objection of the protection.

The distinction between second-degree homicide and manslaughter is that, in manslaughter, the killing is the results of “emotional excitement,” the decide instructed the jury.

Second-degree homicide carries a time period of as much as life with parole; manslaughter carries as much as 15 years in jail. In each instances, the prosecution should show the killing was not justified.

Within the 5 and a half-day trial, jurors heard from 23 witnesses, together with Schurr.

Schurr on capturing Lyoya: ‘If I didn’t reply at the moment, I wouldn’t be right here’

They’re centered on a 2.5-minute wrestle on April 4, 2022, that began with a site visitors cease and ended with Schurr capturing Lyoya behind the top as they fought over the officer’s Taser.

The capturing led to marches, protests and visits from civil rights leaders.

An undated photograph of Patrick Lyoya courtesy household.

“Patrick is no saint,” Kent County Prosecutor Chris Becker stated in his closing argument. “I’m not going to sit here and argue Patrick was a saint. He was drunk driving. He was resisting. He was driving without a driver’s license. None of those are executable offenses.”

“Yes, he was drinking and driving,” protection legal professional Matt Borgula stated in his closing. “Is that a bad thing? Yes. But nobody’s saying they deserve to be executed, and nothing like that happened. The issue is whether or not he was in fear after Patrick Lyoya later on took his Taser.”

In 46 minutes of closing arguments, Prosecutor Chris Becker instructed the jury Schurr made errors that led to the capturing: chasing him within the first place, pulling his taser inside arm’s attain of Lyoya.

“He bit off more than he could chew, which is essentially what happened here,” Becker stated of Schurr.

“Patrick’s not threatening him, Patrick’s not taking a swing at him, Patrick’s trying to get away,” he stated.

Witness in homicide trial: Schurr created jeopardy that led to capturing of Lyoya

The prosecutor argued the Taser was now not a risk.

“There is no intent to hurt, there is no assault occurring right here. He is attempting to get away. You aren’t getting to shoot any individual as a result of they’re attempting to get away. That is not a justification; that is not an excuse.

“The defendant had control; the defendant was on top of him the entire time. Why would he think he would need to use deadly force under these circumstances?”

In his 52-minute closing argument, protection legal professional Borgula argued Schurr was doing his job.

“It’s his job to arrest people who are committing crimes. He can’t just decide, ‘Well, I’ve got to let him go now,'” Borgula stated.

“Patrick Lyoya decides to walk away from police. Why? We don’t know. Officer Schurr is trained, though, that failure to comply, ask yourself why?”

GRPD coaching officer: Shot to again of Lyoya’s head not ‘unreasonable’

Schurr, he argued, was proper to provide chase after Lyoya began to flee, then to tug his Taser throughout their wrestle. The protection argued the Taser, even after each cartridges had been fired in the course of the wrestle, was nonetheless a risk, or that Schurr rightfully perceived it as a risk.

“Then the fight is on,” Borgula stated. “They both want the Taser; that’s what they’re fighting over, and Officer Schurr has a right to it and Patrick Lyoya does not.”

Lyoya, he argued, had management of the Taser. Video confirmed Schurr was on prime of him.

“Patrick Lyoya has got it, holding it in his right hand.”

Holding it like a gun, he argued.

“Officer Schurr is being lifted up. Is he leaping up? No. He is being lifted up by Mr. Lyoya.

“That is now not about an arrest. That is the choice you need to decide, whether or not in second of the risk he was afraid of that Taser, incapacitation or nice bodily hurt, whether or not it was cheap for him to make the choice he by no means wished to make that morning. Christopher Schurr was at work and he was confronted with the hardest determination of his life in half a second.

“It’s not murder; it’s not manslaughter. This man (Schurr) did not commit a crime.”

After the trial, Choose Christina Mims denied a movement for a mistrial by the protection, which claimed she had “rolled her eyes” throughout some testimony.

“For the record,” she stated, “I don’t know the defendant. I don’t know where that implication of bias comes from.”

TAGGED:argumentsattorneyscaseChristopherdeathfinalJurylayLyoyaPatrickSchurr039s
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