http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/it-officially-open-season-black-folks-legal-expert-decries-handling-wilson-grand
On Monday St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch announced the
grand jury had found "that no probable cause exists" to charge Officer
Darren Wilson with any crime in the death of Michael Brown. The jury
deliberated for three months and heard dozens of hours of testimony,
including from Wilson himself. But did they hear the full story?
McCulloch himself had faced public scrutiny throughout the grand jury
investigation, with calls for him to resign over allegations of a
pro-police bias and questions raised about an unusual grand jury process
that resembled a trial. Democacy Now! spoke to Vince Warren,
executive director of the Center for Constitutional Rights, who is just
back from Ferguson. "I don’t think we can take away anything from this
decision not to indict other than that it is now officially open season
on black folks when it comes to police violence," Warren says.
VINCE WARREN: Yes, thanks Amy, and good to see you Sekou. It is
almost inexplicable. The first thing we have to remember is that this is
not a verdict. This hasn’t gotten to verdict. This was an indictment.
So the grand jury was asked to consider evidence in order to prefer
charges so that the police officer could go to trial, but they did not
do that. What was so strange about it is I’ve never seen, in my years,
I’ve never seen a prosecutor take such a hands-off approach. And to
listen to that press conference, Amy, you would think that he had just
sort of spread out the pieces of paper on the table and said, grand
jury, do your thing. Let me tell you, prosecutors never do that. There’s
a reason why they say prosecutors can indict a ham sandwich. It’s
because they can entirely control that process.
Now, they did release some of the transcripts yesterday. And I took a
look at some of them, and what I saw, which people need to know, is
that this wasn’t just the grand jurors listening to the testimony I
idly. The prosecutors are framing the evidence. And as you heard in that
press conference yesterday, there was more talk about what Mike Brown
did than there was about what Darren Wilson did. It was almost as if in
that grand jury process looking to charge Darren Wilson, that they were
really charging Mike Brown.
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