‘I’m angry’: Justine Damond’s heartbroken father opens up on daughter’s murder

Justine Ruszczyk Damond was due to be married just three weeks after the day she was killed. Source: Getty

The father of slain Australian woman Justine Ruszczyk Damond has spoken out on the second anniversary of her death.

Damond, who grew up in Sydney, was shot dead by former officer Mohamed Noor in July 2017 after she had called the police to report a possible assault of a woman in an alley behind her Minneapolis house. Noor, who shot her in the chest, was jailed in June this year for 12 and a half years.

John, her father, said at his daughter’s memorial on Monday morning that he has been left “angry” since the officer pulled the trigger.

“I am angry for him pulling the Goddamn trigger,” he said, according to the Daily Telegraph.

“He testified that he saw her blonde hair and he saw the T-shirt and he still pulled the trigger.

“That’s not right. He saw her blonde hair, he saw her pink T-shirt. Nothing else, no gun, no weapon, no threat and he still pulled the trigger. So yes, I am angry.”

The 33-year-old was found guilty by a jury in April of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter for killing Damond in July 2017 while responding to her 911 call. Several months later he received a 12.5-year prison sentence.

The formed police officer will have to serve two-thirds of his sentence before he is eligible for parole.

The verdict comes months after it was announced Damond’s family will receive a record $US20 million (A$28.5 million) in a settlement from the city of Minneapolis, according to a report by the Minneapolis Star Tribune newspaper.

The settlement, reportedly the largest in Minnesota history, followed news Noor was convicted of third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter for the death of Damond.

Read more: Family of Justine Damond wins $28M payment over wrongful death

The deal, meanwhile, requires Damond’s family to donate US$2 million of its settlement to a local foundation’s fund aimed at addressing gun violence. The family had originally sued the city for $US50 million.

Damond, who grew up in Sydney, was killed in June 2017, just weeks before she was due to marry her American partner Dan Damond and had already adopted his surname.

She had called police after hearing what she feared with a sexual assault taking place outside her house in Minneapolis, but was shot by Noor after she approached the police car in which he and partner Matthew Harrity were sat.

Harrity has already told investigators that he’d been scared by a noise from outside the car and had already drawn his own gun from its holster when Noor, in the passenger seat, shot across him, hitting Damond in the abdomen.

She died at the scene and Noor declined to cooperate with investigators looking into the shooting. The charges against Noor took nine months to bring

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