Friday’s acquittal of Trevon Dumas in the stabbing of
bouncer Lou Ferrin, who lived in Warren, was one of the more surprising
verdicts I’ve seen in several years of covering trials.
Even though I didn’t attend much of the trial, I did view the
closing arguments and video, and talked to Ferrin’s family and an attorney
involved in the case.
Jurors apparently weren’t convinced that Dumas was the man
who stabbed Ferrin, 40, in the neck while Ferrin was removing him from the
now-closed Pandemonium nightclub in downtown Detroit. Two witnesses who
accompanied Dumas said they saw him strike Ferrin in the neck area but didn’t see a knife.
Grainy surveillance video shows a man in a plaid shirt, presumably Dumas,
swinging at Ferrin. But again, no knife. A circumstantial case.
Dumas’ attorney Cena Colbert White did
a good job of raising reasonable doubt, although her conspiracy claims about cops and/or prosecutors manipulating the video seemed
outlandish.
The jury could have chosen first- or second-degree murder or
manslaughter but instead concluded, “not guilty.”
This outcome falls into the category that criminal defense
attorney Jim Thomas calls, “unproven.” Not necessarily innocent, but the
prosecution couldn’t prove guilt.
And for those online commentators who have injected race into
the case (Ferrin was white; Dumas is black), the Wayne County jury was made up
of nine whites and three blacks.