The search warrant was signed by a judge on Friday, September 7, a day after the shooting. The affidavit for the search warrant was compiled and signed by Dallas P.D. Detective Angela Arredondo.
The ARREST warrant (previously published here) was obtained Sunday September 9 and its affidavit was compiled and signed by Texas Ranger David L. Carpenter.
The ARREST warrant (previously published here) was obtained Sunday September 9 and its affidavit was compiled and signed by Texas Ranger David L. Carpenter.
This is from Det. Arredondo's affidavit in support of search warrant:
The search warrant affidavit, obtained first, is often not going to be as complete or as accurate as the arrest warrant affidavit but, dear God, Arredondo knew that Botham Jean was not the SUBJECT! Mr. Jean was the VICTIM, yet Arredondo labeled him the SUBJECT. HORSE. SHIT. Arredondo does not mention Amber Guyger by name! NBCDFW reported on Monday, September 10:Guyger was not identified as the officer involved in the shooting until Saturday..." Which is BULL SHIT by NBCDFW. Guyger called 911 herself immediately after shooting Mr. Jean on September 6!
Arredondo wrote that Mr. Jean, therein "the subject" and "an unknown male," "CONFRONTED THE OFFICER AT THE DOOR"! Oh really? Carpenter wrote in his ARREST warrant affidavit that Jean was "across the room" when Guyger first saw him.
"The officer possibly believed the subject was an intruder": YOU DO NOT PUT "POSSIBLIES" IN A WARRANT! YOU DON'T PUT "POSSIBLIES" THAT ARE DEFINITELY WRONG IN A WARRANT! Who was the intruder? GUYGER!
"A neighbor stated he heard an exchange of words immediately followed by at least two gunshots":
Carpenter wrote that Guyger "gave commands" "which were ignored" by Jean. Which is it, guys?
Search warrant affidavits are usually so detailed in their description of the premises to be searched (so that the wrong premises are not hit) that officers often supplement their written descriptions with a photograph. This is Det. Arredondo's description of Mr. Jean's apartment door:
What made Botham Jean's front door NOT SUSCEPTIBLE TO MISTAKEN SEARCH from all the other olive colored front doors in the building was his bright red door mat. Not in the search warrant.
That is a HORSE SHIT search warrant authored by Det. Angela Arredondo. HORSE SHIT.
Arredondo wrote that Mr. Jean, therein "the subject" and "an unknown male," "CONFRONTED THE OFFICER AT THE DOOR"! Oh really? Carpenter wrote in his ARREST warrant affidavit that Jean was "across the room" when Guyger first saw him.
"The officer possibly believed the subject was an intruder": YOU DO NOT PUT "POSSIBLIES" IN A WARRANT! YOU DON'T PUT "POSSIBLIES" THAT ARE DEFINITELY WRONG IN A WARRANT! Who was the intruder? GUYGER!
"A neighbor stated he heard an exchange of words immediately followed by at least two gunshots":
Carpenter wrote that Guyger "gave commands" "which were ignored" by Jean. Which is it, guys?
Search warrant affidavits are usually so detailed in their description of the premises to be searched (so that the wrong premises are not hit) that officers often supplement their written descriptions with a photograph. This is Det. Arredondo's description of Mr. Jean's apartment door:
What made Botham Jean's front door NOT SUSCEPTIBLE TO MISTAKEN SEARCH from all the other olive colored front doors in the building was his bright red door mat. Not in the search warrant.
That is a HORSE SHIT search warrant authored by Det. Angela Arredondo. HORSE SHIT.