Chattanooga Times Free Press

Prosecutor: No charges for officer in Brown’s 2014 death in Missouri

- BY JIM SALTER

CLAYTON, Mo. — St. Louis County’s prosecutor announced Thursday that he will not charge the former police officer who fatally shot Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, a dramatic decision that could reopen old wounds amid a renewed and intense national conversati­on about racial injustice and the police treatment of people of color.

Prosecutin­g Attorney Wesley Bell’s decision marked the third time prosecutor­s investigat­ed and opted not to charge Darren Wilson, the white officer who fatally shot Brown, a Black 18-year-old, on Aug. 9, 2014. A St. Louis County grand jury declined to indict Wilson in November 2014, and the U.S. Department of Justice also declined to charge him in March 2015.

Civil rights leaders and Brown’s parents had hoped that Bell, the county’s first Black prosecutor who took office in January 2019, would see things differentl­y.

“My heart breaks” for Brown’s parents, a somber Bell said during a news conference. “I know this is not the result they were looking for and that their pain will continue forever.”

Describing the announceme­nt as “one of the most difficult things I’ve had to do,” Bell said that his office conducted a five-month, unannounce­d, review of witness statements, forensic reports and other evidence.

“The question for this office was a simple one: Could we prove beyond a reasonable doubt that when Darren Wilson shot Micheal Brown he committed murder or manslaught­er under Missouri law? After an independen­t and in-depth review of the evidence, we cannot prove that he did,” Bell said.

But, he said, “our investigat­ion does not exonerate Darren Wilson.”

Wilson’s attorney, Jim Towey, said it was clear after three investigat­ions that Wilson did nothing wrong.

“We all had the same conclusion: There was no crime,” Towey said.

“I am just hoping that everybody gets to have some closure, particular­ly the Brown family,” he said.

The shooting touched off movnths of unrest in Ferguson and made the St. Louis suburb synonymous with a national debate about police treatment of minority people.

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