[Ed. Note: Greg Prickett is a former police officer and supervisor who went to law school, hung out a shingle and now practices criminal defense and family law in Fort Worth, Texas. While he was an officer, he was a police firearms instructor, and routinely taught armed tactics to other officers.]
Felony murder[1] is an old concept that if someone dies while a suspect is committing a felony (other than some form of homicide), then the suspect can be charged and convicted with murder. It is routinely used in criminal prosecutions across the nation. On January 28, 2019, Houston Police officers, acting on a no-knock search warrant that had been fraudulently obtained, entered a house and a gunfight ensued.
During that gunfight, the two occupants of the home, Rhogena Nicholas, 58, and Dennis Tuttle, 59, were killed, and four Houston Police officers were wounded by gunfire. The wounded include the officer who falsified the search warrant affidavit, Gerald Goines. Goines is now under investigation for these crimes, a number of which are felonies. Goines has also been in several shootings, being shot in 1992 and 1997. Continue reading
