Jury Rules Officers Justified in Shooting 13-Year-Old Boy

By Beacon Staff

HELENA – A jury on Thursday determined that two law enforcement officers were justified when they shot and killed a 13-year-old boy who fired at them during a high-speed chase in north-central Montana 4 1/2 years ago.

The jury deliberated for less than two hours before deciding that Montana Highway Patrol Trooper Jason Wickum and Chouteau County Sheriff’s Deputy Kyle Meier acted reasonably and lawfully when they pursued Mark Keeley and eventually shot him 29 times near Fort Benton the night of April 21, 2007.

Keeley led officers on the chase after stealing $8 worth of gasoline in Chester.

His mother, Michelle Springer, filed a negligence lawsuit against the officers in 2009, arguing the shooting was “totally unnecessary, unreasonable and constituted a blatant use of excessive and deadly force.”

During the four-day trial, jurors watched about half an hour of video from Meier’s dashboard camera. It showed Keeley’s vehicle drive off the road after hitting spiked “stop sticks.”

Keeley fired a 12-gauge shotgun loaded with birdshot at the deputy and the trooper, and both officers returned fire. The video shows Wickum fired 17 shots and Meier fired 12 over the course of about two minutes.

A state medical examiner testified at an August 2007 coroner’s inquest, which found no wrongdoing on the part of the officers, that three bullets went into the back of Keeley’s head, two into his back, three into his thigh and six into his shoulder and arm.

Wickum testified that he believed both officers’ lives were in danger after Keeley fired at them.

Wickum left the courthouse Thursday without commenting, but Meier stood outside with his wife.

“I am glad about the outcome of this trial,” he said. “I didn’t feel we ever did anything wrong, and I knew in my heart that this would be the outcome.”

Also named in Springer’s lawsuit were the Montana Highway Patrol, the state Department of Justice, the Chouteau County sheriff’s office and Sheriff Vern Burdick. The complaint sought $2 million in damages for her son’s suffering and her own damages.

Springer left the courtroom without commenting.