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Friends, family remember 26-year-old man killed by Dallas police officer

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ASSOCIATED PRESS / MARCH 24, 2014 FILE PHOTO

This photo provided by Harding University in Searcy, Ark., shows Botham Jean, speaking at the university. Jean was fatally shot Sept. 6, by off-duty officer Amber Guyger who says she mistook his residence for her own. The service for 26-year-old Botham Jean will start at noon Thursday, Sept. 13, at a church in suburban Dallas following a public viewing.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mourners line up during the public viewing before the funeral of Botham Shem Jean at the Greenville Avenue Church of Christ on Thursday, September 13, 2018 in Richardson, Texas. He was shot and killed by a Dallas police officer in his apartment last week in Dallas.

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ASSOCIATED PRESS

Mourners console each other during the public viewing before the funeral of Botham Shem Jean at the Greenville Avenue Church of Christ in Richardson, Texas. He was shot and killed by a Dallas police officer in his apartment last week in Dallas.

DALLAS >> A 26-year-old man killed in his apartment by a Dallas police officer who said she mistook his apartment for her own was remembered Thursday as a devout Christian who loved to sing at church and always had time to help others.

“He was always in the service of others, even when it wasn’t convenient for him,” Alexis Stossel, a friend of Botham Jean from college said at his funeral in a suburban Dallas.

Dallas mayor Mike Rawlings and Dallas Police Chief U. Renee Hall were in attendance at the funeral.

Jean’s mother has said he was only a teenager when he presented a plan to evangelize his home country of St. Lucia. He came forward with a map of the small island nation, which he had sectioned off into pieces, and pointed to the communities he wanted to impact first.

“Botham did everything with passion … God gave me an angel,” Allison Jean said at a prayer vigil last weekend.

According to court documents, Officer Amber Guyger, 30, said she mistook his apartment for her own and thought she encountered a burglar. Guyger was arrested Sunday for manslaughter and has since been released on bond.

Jean’s slaying sparked protest and outrage, and became a flashpoint in an ongoing national conversation over issues of race and law enforcement. But under the lofted ceiling of Jean’s church last weekend, the narrative centered on his life and legacy as attendees recalled memories of the man they knew as a passionate singer and caring friend.

Allison Jean said her son was about 8 years old when he wanted to be baptized, but was denied by his father. Jean tried again a year later, again with no success. The third time he asked, Jean came with tears in his eyes.

“Botham said ‘Dad, I want to be baptized. I want to be a Christian,’” she recalled to the dozens of people seated in the blue pews.

She also remembered how Jean found his way from St. Lucia to Searcy, Arkansas, where he attended Harding University. There, he majored in accounting and information systems before graduating in 2016, the school said in a statement.

She told Jean to apply to the University of the West Indies, but also gave the OK to apply to Harding University, which was expensive. But Allison Jean said she later found the University of the West Indies never received an application from him.

Instead, Jean had his acceptance from Harding University and a proposal, saying the high price would be justified because he could receive an education while remaining within a religious community.

Todd Gentry, a minister at College Church of Christ in Searcy, Arkansas, has said Jean worked as his intern for three years.

“He cared about the Lord and he wanted you to care about the Lord,” Gentry said. Jean, he said, made people feel important, whether it was with a cup of coffee or a conversation.

Jean had been living in Dallas and working at accounting and consulting firm PwC.

Co-worker Kerry Ray has said Jean lit up a room the moment he stepped in and described him as a selfless and caring man.

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