A judge on Thursday set a $100,000 bond for a former Florida sheriff's deputy who was charged with manslaughter after fatally shooting a U.S. Air Force senior airman at his apartment in May.
Former Okaloosa County Deputy Sheriff Eddie Duran Jr., 38, was charged with manslaughter with a firearm last Friday after he was accused of killing 23-year-old Roger Fortson in Fort Walton Beach, a small city in the Florida Panhandle. If convicted, Duran could face up to 30 years in prison.
Duran was initially denied bail during his first court appearance on Tuesday at the Okaloosa County Circuit Court. In Thursday's hearing, Judge Terrance R. Ketchel set bond at $100,000 after the state asked for a $250,000 bond amount and Duran's defense attorneys requested for $10,000.
During the hearing, Duran's attorney, Rodney Smith, argued for the release of Duran while prosecutors noted that the former sheriff's deputy faces a "very serious charge."
"He has spent his entire life, his entire career, and his military career, trying to save people — help people," Smith said. "He's not a danger to the community."
In addition to the bond amount, the court ruled that Duran cannot possess any weapons or firearms and is prohibited from contacting Fortson’s family and other witnesses in the case. Duran was also ordered not to leave the First Judicial Circuit area of Florida without court approval.
Jail records show that Duran was released following Thursday's hearing.
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Duran was responding to a report of a domestic disturbance call at an apartment complex in Fort Walton Beach on May 3. His body camera footage showed him knocking on Fortson's apartment door multiple times and announcing that he was with the sheriff's office.
Fortson answered the door while holding a gun in his right hand that was pointed toward the ground, according to the footage. Duran then opened fire and fatally shot Fortson.
Prominent civil rights attorney Ben Crump noted that during the incident, Fortson was on a FaceTime call with his girlfriend, who "heard everything" and said Fortson was alarmed by the aggressive pounding on the door.
The incident drew national attention as Fortson's family demanded justice for months following the shooting. The Fortson family, along with Crump, held a news conference and rally earlier this month calling for the Florida State Attorney's Office to press charges against Duran.
Crump said in a statement last Friday that charging Duran was the "first step towards justice for the family of Roger Fortson."
"Nothing can ever bring Roger back, and our fight is far from over, but we are hopeful that this arrest and these charges will result in real justice for the Fortson family," he said. "Let this be a reminder to law enforcement officers everywhere that they swore a solemn oath to protect and defend, and their actions have consequences, especially when it results in the loss of life."
Duran was booked into the Okaloosa County Jail on Monday after prosecutors filed one count of manslaughter with a firearm against him last Friday. Duran was transferred to the Escambia County Jail following his first court appearance on Tuesday.
The charging decision came after the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office determined that Duran's actions during the shooting were "not objectively reasonable." The sheriff's office fired him in May after the agency completed its internal investigation.
In a statement last week, the sheriff's office said the agency stands by its decision to terminate Duran "as a result of the administrative internal affairs investigation that found his use of force was not objectively reasonable."
"We continue to wish Mr. Fortson’s family comfort and peace, as the former deputy’s criminal case proceeds," the sheriff's office said.
According to the agency's investigative report, Duran received a bachelor's degree in criminal psychology and was about halfway through a master's degree in human service counseling, focusing on crisis response and trauma. He then served in the Army in 2003 and was deployed to Iraq in 2008.
He shifted from military intelligence to law enforcement in 2007 and received training through the Army's Special Reaction Team as a military police officer, the report states. Duran received an honorable discharge in 2014 and began his civilian law enforcement career in Oklahoma as a police officer, then K9 officer from 2015 to 2019.
He then moved to Florida and joined the Okaloosa County Sheriff's Office, according to the report. After moving away in 2021, Duran returned in 2023 and rejoined the agency.
Contributing: Krystal Nurse and Taylor Ardrey, USA TODAY; Collin Bestor, Northwest Florida Daily News