The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) has been called upon to look into an officer-involved shooting that ended the life of 58-year-old Daphine Mae Jennings in Pine Mountain, Georgia. This incident, occurring late on a Monday night, has rippled through the Troup County community, prompting questions and a keen eye on the unfolding investigation.
What started as a 911 call from Jennings escalated quickly. In her initial phone call, she threatened to commit suicide and thereafter alleged that someone was trying to break into her home, prompting a response from the Troup County Sheriff’s Office. As deputies arrived and engaged with Jennings, who was holed up inside her house, they worked to coax her outside. Eventually, when Jennings did step out, she was armed, confronting the deputies with a firearm—a situation that led a deputy to shoot, resulting in Jennings’ death.
Seen at the scene and later reported on the GBI’s official release was the recovery of a gun, implying Jennings was indeed armed, as the deputies claimed. She was pronounced dead at the location of the incident, her body slated for an autopsy at the GBI Medical Examiner’s Office, in efforts to add clarity to the exact circumstances surrounding her death…