HOUSTON _ A white Dallas police officer charged with manslaughter in the fatal shooting last week of a black neighbor in an apartment she apparently mistook as her own could face more serious charges, authorities said Monday.
The case will be presented to a grand jury after all evidence related to the shooting Thursday night is collected, Dallas County District Attorney Faith Johnson said.
Officer Amber Guyger, 30, a four-year veteran, was arrested late Sunday in connection with the shooting, booked and freed on $300,000 bail. The Texas Rangers announced the arrest Sunday night but declined to provide details about the case.
The arrest followed outcry from family and friends of victim Botham Shem Jean, 26, a native of the Caribbean island nation of St. Lucia, scion of a prominent, politically connected family.
Police Chief U. Renee Hall said during the weekend that the Texas Rangers asked police not to charge Guyger until they investigated further. Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings posted a tweet thanking investigators and residents for being "respectful of the investigative process over these past few days."
According to police, Guyger shot and killed Jean after going in uniform from the police department after her shift to the nearby South Side Flats apartment complex. After the shooting, she contacted dispatchers and told responding officers that she had mistaken Jean's apartment for her own. Her blood was drawn at the scene so that it could be tested for alcohol and drugs, the police chief said, but the results have yet to be released.
The Dallas County medical examiner's office said Monday that he died of a gunshot wounds to the chest and abdomen. His death was ruled a homicide.
Last year, Guyger shot and wounded a man named Uvaldo Perez while she was on duty after he wrested her Taser away during a struggle. Guyger was not charged in connection with that shooting.
Jean's relatives and friends had been calling for the officer's arrest and still had questions Monday about what role race played in the shooting.
At a briefing shortly before the officer's arrest late Sunday, the Jean family's attorneys said they had provided prosecutors with new evidence _ a witness and video footage _ that they declined to share publicly.
On Monday, the attorneys released a statement saying, "the family is relieved that the officer who senselessly killed Jean will now face criminal charges for her reckless act" but that "many questions remain unanswered."
"Black people have been killed by police in some of the most arbitrary ways in America," said family attorney Benjamin Crump, who also represented the families of Trayvon Martin and Michael Brown.
"Blacks have been killed for 'driving while black' in their automobiles, 'walking while black' in their neighborhoods and now 'living while black' in their own apartment. Each time it is more shocking than before," Crump said. "This crime was not only a shock for the Jean family but also one that continues to astonish most sensible Americans."
Jean's neighbors, some of whom witnessed the shooting's aftermath, also had questions Monday.
Alyssa Kinsey, 29, who lives next door to Jean's apartment, posted photos and questions on Facebook about how the officer could have mistaken the unit for her own.
"Please take note of the bright red floor mat. (I took this photo yesterday.)," Kinsey wrote. "She didn't see that when she was fumbling with the keys? Or when she put her bag down? Really? This story makes no sense. My wonderful neighbor is dead, so many are completely traumatized and she is walking free. Where is the justice?"