ST. LOUIS — Javad Khazaeli and Abby Duncan both asked a federal jury on Friday to focus on a question. The two attorneys were asking different questions.
One would prevail, to the tune of a $18.75 million verdict.
The jury for a week had been hearing evidence in a federal courtroom in ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ for a lawsuit brought by Dennis Ball-Bey. He’s the father of Mansur Ball-Bey, an 18-year-old who was shot and killed on Aug. 19, 2015, by former ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ police Officer Kyle Chandler.
, who represents Dennis Ball-Bey, told the jury in his closing argument, “This is a case with a simple question … Why is there a body here, and a gun 164 feet away?â€
The body of Mansur, who had no criminal record, was found in the front yard of a house on Walton Avenue in the Fountain Park neighborhood after a police raid and foot chase. His gun, which he never fired, was found sitting next to a dumpster in the alley behind the backyard. The raid was at the home of Mansur’s cousin.
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A family photo shows Mansur Ball-Bey in his high school graduation gown while holding his nephew, Yishuwa Hickman, 3.
Khazaeli’s case focused on the fact an autopsy revealed Mansur’s body had a severed spine. It’s a critical fact because Chandler’s version of events was that he shot Mansur in the backyard and then Mansur, with a hollow-point bullet that hit his spine and also went through his aorta, somehow continued running into the front yard.
Duncan, who works for the city counselor’s office and is representing Chandler, turned the question around when addressing the jury. “The million-dollar question is: When was the (spinal) cord transected? When did that occur?â€
The defense argued that the bullet damaged the spine but that it wasn’t severed until later, perhaps when officers were handcuffing Mansur. Chandler, his partner, Ronald Vaughan, and several other officers all testified that Mansur was still running after they heard gunshots.
In the end, the jury of six men and three women saw the case through the prism offered by Khazaeli. After about 90 minutes of deliberation, they found in favor of Dennis Ball-Bey and awarded him $6.25 million in compensatory damages from the city. In a second part of the trial, held Friday afternoon, the jury awarded the family an additional $12.5 million in punitive damages. Khazaeli said he believes it’s the largest verdict ever against the city in a police shooting case.
Unless there are appeals, the verdict will bring an end to a decade-long drama surrounding one of the most controversial police shootings in recent ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ history. The shooting happened about a year after the shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson that ignited protests nationwide.
“After nine years, the family finally has a modicum of justice,†Khazaeli said after the verdict. “But it shouldn’t have taken this long. The jury has spoken and hopefully the scourge of killing unarmed Black men will lessen.â€

Dennis Ball-Bey and Barbara Chandler, the parents of Mansur Ball-Bey, in the federal courthouse in ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ on Friday, Jan. 31, 2025 after a jury verdict for the 2015 police shooting of their son.
Two days after Mansur died, ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ medical examiner Michael Graham told the press that Ball-Bey had been shot in the back and that the bullet severed his spine. Graham said a severed spine would not have allowed Mansur to run. Graham later changed his theory, saying Ball-Bey’s spine perhaps was severed when he was arrested, and ordered a second autopsy after learning his statements in the press contradicted the version Chandler and Vaughan had given.
Then-Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce declined to prosecute the officers, though she made clear she didn’t believe the shooting was “justified.â€
During the trial this week, Khazaeli and his fellow attorneys painted Chandler and Vaughan as liars and pointed out they had been fired in 2021 for being dishonest in internal investigations.
Duncan said that didn’t matter because every witness claimed they saw Mansur running after hearing gunshots.
“They want to take shots at Chandler and Vaughan? Go for it,†Duncan told the jury. “What about the other five guys? All you need to believe is one.â€
In the end, trusting the evidence of shell casings and experts who contradicted the officers’ claims on where they were standing when firing their guns, the jury determined that it was more likely than not (the standard in civil cases) that the officers were lying or mistaken.
“It’s been a very long time and I’ve been waiting on the justice,†Dennis Ball-Bay said after the verdict. “The truth has come out.â€
Coverage of the Mansur Ball-Bey shooting
Look back at ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Post-Dispatch coverage of the shooting of Mansur Ball-Bey, and the aftermath of vigils, protests and legal proceedings.
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Mansur Ball-Bey, 18, was shot by police who said he pointed a gun at them while fleeing a raid.
The protest at issue in the suit followed the fatal police shooting of Mansur Ball-Bey on Aug. 19, 2015.
The department did not publicly release the findings of its Force Investigative Unit.
Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce On June 2, 2016, released her findings on the fatal shooting of Mansur Ball-Bey, 18, by ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ police offic…
Mansur Ball-Bey, 18, ran from a back yard through a gangway to a front yard before collapsing, police said.
Funeral services for Mansur Ball-Bey have been set for Saturday.Â
The Circuit Attorney's office will conduct a simultaneous investigation separate from the police inquiry.Â
Police Chief Sam Dotson urges calm and says it's too early to weigh in on whether the shooting was justified because the facts are still developing.
They promise impartial, transparent investigation
Shooting happened on Walton Avenue near Page Boulevard in Fountain Park neighborhood
Shooting happened on Walton Avenue near Page Boulevard in Fountain Park neighborhood