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Posted on: July 26, 2019

Now-former KCPD officer charged in fatal vehicular crash just before October Chiefs game

For Immediate Release

July 26, 2019

A now-former Kansas City police officer who crashed into a vehicle outside the Truman Sports Complex before the Oct. 18, 2018, Kansas City Chiefs' Sunday night NFL game, killing one passenger in the car and injuring two others, has been charged with involuntary manslaughter and other felony counts, Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker announced today.

Terrell E. Watkins, dob: 2/25/1985, faces Involuntary Manslaughter 1st Degree, two counts of Assault 2nd Degree and the misdemeanor count of Carless and Imprudent Driving.*

According to court records filed today, on Oct. 21, 2018, a few minutes after 4 p.m., just a few hours before the Kansas City Chiefs were scheduled to play a Sunday night NFL game against the Cincinnati Bengals, a Kansas City police officer driving a blue KCPD Ford Van struck the rear of a red Mitsubishi Lancer caught up in traffic congestion outside the Truman Sports Complex at the Stadium Drive exit off of Interstate 435. The driver of the vehicle struck by the police van, Chandan Rajanna, 17, was pronounced dead at the scene. Two passengers in the vehicle were injured in the crash. Watkins was transported to an area hospital with non-life threatening injuries. Witnesses told police the blue police van was observed traveling at a high rate of speed north on I-435, just north of Bannister Road. Records revealed the defendant was employed off-duty as security for the Chiefs and was due to report at 4 p.m. Data from the police van's Airbag Control Module showed the van was traveling 76 mph less than a second prior to impact with the victim's vehicle. The defendant's phone records revealed his phone was actively in use in the moments immediately preceding his report of the crash to police dispatch.

The defendant is no longer employed by the Kansas City Police Department.

"We mourn with the family and the community for the loss of our teenage victim and his promising future, cut short," said Jackson County Prosecutor Jean Peters Baker. 

For more information, contact:

Michael Mansur

Director of Communication

Jackson County Prosecutor’s Office

Jean Peters Baker, Prosecutor

Work   : (816) 881-3812

Mobile: (816) 674-3954

mmansur@jacksongov.org

http://jacksoncountyprosecutor.com

*Charges are only accusations and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until the defendant is either found guilty or has pleaded.



 




Charging Document(s)
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