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Dallas shooting victim was a â€~big personality, nice person’

DALLAS (AP) - Botham Jean organized church mission trips. He installed Skype for elderly parents who missed their kids. One time he met a stranger who shared his mom’s birthday, so the bighearted 6-foot-1 choir singer got the woman a cake.

He cried after getting a job in Dallas at the powerhouse accounting firm PwC. His eyes were set on senior management when his downstairs neighbor, a white Dallas police officer, entered his apartment, drew her gun and fatally shot him.

Jean “was a near-perfect person of color,” said Ben Crump, a lawyer for the Jean family. “A 26-year-old college-educated black man, certified public accountant, working for one of the big three accounting firms in the world ... it shouldn’t take all of that for unarmed black and brown people in America to get justice.”

The jury that convicted Amber Guyger of murder sentenced her Wednesday to 10 years in prison. The 31-year-old former police officer, who says she believed she was in her own apartment and mistook Jean for an intruder, had faced up to life in prison for the September 2018 killing.

The sentence was met with boos and jeers by a crowd gathered outside the courtroom. But Brandt Jean, 18, told Guyger his brother would have wanted her to turn her life to Christ before getting permission to hug Guyger in an unusual and emotionally intense courtroom scene.

It unfolded just a day after Jean’s family and activists in Dallas _ a diverse city where the mayor, police chief and district attorney are all black _ rejoiced over the guilty verdict, calling it a hopeful sign of turning tides on police accountability in the deaths of unarmed black men.

Jean’s mother, Allison Jean, said Wednesday the sentence was a decade for Guyger to change her life. Then she ripped into Dallas and what she characterized as police corruption and incompetence.

“If Amber Guyger was trained to not shoot in the heart, my son would be standing here today,” she said.

In his native Caribbean island country of St. Lucia, Jean won trophies for academic excellence, started a choir and organized school clubs. He confided to an uncle that he aspired to become the prime minister of the mostly black population of about 180,000 people.

Allison Jean has said her son, the middle child in her family, was socially conscious and mindful about being black in America after leaving the island to attend Harding University in Arkansas.

She told The New York Times last year that he drove the speed limit and kept his car in good repair. When she asked why he wore such dressy clothes, according to the newspaper, Jean told her he didn’t want police to stop him and think he was somebody he wasn’t.

Who Jean really was, attorneys told the mostly black and Hispanic jury, was a literal choirboy. The deeply religious young man spent Sundays on the phone with his father critiquing sermons and writing his own.

His mom fretted about affording college in America. St. Lucia’s currency is weak against the U.S. dollar. But Jean - who also went by “Bo” - was determined to attend a Christian campus where he could sing.

“It was almost his aura. When he went to a meeting or he joined your group or whatever it was, you knew Bo. He was just big personality, nice person, big smile,” said Kerry Ray, Jean’s boss at PwC. “Never really had a bad thing to say about anybody.”

Crump said spotless character shouldn’t be required for minorities in the U.S. to get justice. Even Jean’s family and activists had been on guard for character attacks, at one point fuming that a smear campaign was afoot after police revealed early in the investigation that marijuana had been found in Jean’s apartment. Guyger’s attorneys did not make an issue of Jean’s marijuana use, and it came out during the trial that Guyger herself admitted to having used pot when she applied for a job with Dallas police. Jean’s sister, Allisa Findley, told jurors her brother used marijuana after not liking how he felt on Adderall, which he was prescribed for attention hyperactivity disorder.

She said Jean was excited about his life. She wanted her baby brother to move closer to her in New York, but he told her he still had career plans in Dallas.

Their last conversation was the night he died. Jean was about to turn 27 and had just two cooking pans in his apartment. He wanted Drake concert tickets for his birthday, but Findley was bent on a more practical gift.

“I told him, â€~I thought we agreed you were going to be a grown up this year?’” Findley recalled. “He said, â€~OK, fine. Get me the pots and pans.’”

___

Weber reported from Austin. Associated Press Writer Jill Bleed in Little Rock, Arkansas, contributed to this report.

Botham Jean's mother, Allison Jean, speaks to the jury about her son during sentencing testimony in the 204th District Court at the Frank Crowley Courts Building, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2019, in Dallas. Earlier, former Dallas police officer Amber Guyger was found guilty of murder by a jury. Guyger shot and killed Botham Jean, an unarmed 26-year-old neighbor in his own apartment last year, who she said she believed was an intruder in her home. (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News via AP, Pool) The Associated Press
Assistant District Attorney Jason Hermus waves a photo of Botham Jean at the jury as he presents his closing arguments in Amber Guyger's murder trial in the 204th District Court at the Frank Crowley Courts Building in Dallas, Monday, September 30, 2019. Guyger shot and killed Botham Jean, an unarmed 26-year-old neighbor in his own apartment last year. She told police she thought his apartment was her own and that he was an intruder. (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News via AP, Pool) The Associated Press
Assistant District Attorney LaQuita Long, left, presents family photos as evidence to Botham Jean's mother, Allison Jean, during sentencing testimony for former Dallas Police Officer Amber Guyger in 204th District Court at the Frank Crowley Courts Building in Dallas, Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2019. Guyger, who shot her black unarmed neighbor Botham Jean to death after, she said, mistaking his apartment for her own, was convicted of murder Tuesday. (Tom Fox/The Dallas Morning News via AP, Pool) The Associated Press
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