
Dan Lovelace
In a front-page story on Sunday, the San Francisco Chronicle looked back at a 2002 case that rocked the Phoenix area after a suburban police officer was accused of murder in the on-duty shooting death of a mother of three.
The Chronicle took a close look at the trial of former Chandler police officer Dan Lovelace, acquitted in 2004 of second-degree murder, in light charges being filed against a Bay Area police officer, accused of killing an unarmed man on an Oakland train platform while on duty.
In the profile, the newspaper shows how rare it is for a police officer to be accused of what it calls “the ultimate charge.” Police kill 350 people a year nationally, but the Lovelace case was just one of six in the past 15 years — not including the Oakland case — in which prosecutors have filed murder charges. None were convicted of murder.
The newspaper scored interviews with a wide array of players in the case, including a juror who acquitted Lovelace, and former Maricopa County Attorney Rick Romley, who said he brought the charge in part to send a message to law enforcement. The husband of Dawn Rae Nelson, the woman who died in the shooting, was also interviewed.









