On June 1, 2016, a
grand jury charged Raja with manslaughter by
culpable negligence and attempted first-degree murder with a firearm. Palm Beach County State Attorney
Dave Aronberg announced that the grand jury concluded Raja had no justification to shoot Jones, and the charging documents "allege that Raja never identified himself to Jones as a police officer as he drove up to the stranded motorist, yelled commands, and then opened fire." Raja was arrested and his bond was set at $250,000. After making
bail, Raja was released from the Palm Beach County Jail and placed under
house arrest. A variety of conditions of pretrial release, including
GPS monitoring and surrender of Raja's
passport, were imposed. On January 17, 2017, investigators publicly released evidence in the case, including "more than 3,000 pages of documents and 50 video and audio recordings," in response to a
public records request made by the
Palm Beach Post and nine other news outlets. Included in the evidence were audio tapes from the phone calls to
AT&T Roadside Assistance and
9-1-1 were released. Although Raja had told investigators previously that he had called 9-1-1 before shooting Jones, the audio recording of Jones' roadside assistance call showed the final shot had been fired 33 seconds before Raja dialed. On January 18, 2018, defense attorneys for Raja filed a motion to dismiss all charges citing Florida's "stand your ground" laws. In the motion, Raja claims that he identified himself as a police officer as he exited the van, that Jones "immediately jumped out, saying 'I'm okay, man'" as he approached the vehicle, and that Jones then "immediately drew a gun and pointed it at Officer Raja." Defense attorneys claim that Raja "repeatedly yelled for [Jones] to put his hands up and to 'drop the gun.'" Raja's scheduled release date is February 27, 2044, but under Florida Parole and Probation guidelines his minimum release date is May 29, 2040. As of September 2019, Raja was being held at the
Wakulla Correctional Institution in Crawfordville, a minimum- to medium-security-level prison southeast of
Tallahassee. Raja was the first Florida police officer in 30 years to be convicted in connection with an on-duty shooting. ==Civil suit against City and Raja==