Daily Times (Primos, PA)

St. Louis officer unique in opting for trial without a jury

- By Jim Salter

ST. LOUIS » The fate of a former St. Louis police officer accused of killing a suspect rests with a judge, not a jury of his peers. Experts say that given the public scrutiny of recent police shootings, Jason Stockley’s decision to opt for a bench trial makes sense.

Stockley, 36, who is white, is charged with first-degree murder in the December 2011 death of Anthony Lamar Smith, a 24-year-old black drug suspect who was shot after leading police on a chase. The trial before veteran Circuit Judge Timothy Wilson began Tuesday and is expected to last about two weeks.

The U.S. Constituti­on spells out that people accused of crimes have the right to have their cases heard “by an impartial jury,” but defendants can opt to have the verdict rendered by a judge. Peter Joy, a professor at Washington University School of Law in St. Louis, said Stockley’s decision to waive a jury trial “has a lot to do with the public’s awareness of the shooting, especially in St. Louis.”

“Also, in some parts of the city, relations between the police and citizens of the city are not great,” Joy said Wednesday.

The St. Louis area has been the site of several shootings of black suspects by police officers in the three years since 18-yearold Michael Brown, who was black and unarmed, was fatally shot by white officer Darren Wilson in nearby Ferguson, Missouri. Wilson was not charged with a crime, but the shooting led to months of often violent protests.

Stockley’s request last month for a bench trial didn’t state a reason; a gag order in the case has prevented attorneys from commenting outside the courtroom. Prosecutor­s wanted the case heard by a 12-member jury. Assistant Circuit Attorney Aaron Levinson wrote in a motion of opposition that the “factual determinat­ions necessary for a finding in this case would be better made by twelve impartial members of the community.”

Levinson also wrote that trials involving officers charged with shooting people “are of particular interest to the public. Removing these cases from juries and letting a single judge determine guilt in such controvers­ial cases creates a perception amongst the public that police officers accused of crimes get special treatment in our criminal justice system.”

But Larry Cunningham, vice dean at St. John’s University School of Law in New York and a former prosecutor, said people accused of crimes usually prefer a jury trial “because all you need is one juror out of the 12 in order to get a hung jury. Just convince the jury there’s a little reasonable doubt, you’re likely to get an acquittal.”

Wilson, a 69-year-old former assistant U.S. attorney who has been a judge since 1989, agreed to waive the jury trial, writing that “after 28 years serving as a trial judge, the Court is confident in its own judgment and analytical abilities.”

Philip Stinson, a criminolog­ist at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, said 83 nonfederal law enforcemen­t officers have been arrested for murder or manslaught­er related to an on-duty shooting since 2005. Thirty were convicted, though often of a lesser crime than the original charge. Fourteen pleaded guilty and 16 were convicted by jury trial.

Stinson said no officer was convicted in a bench trial, but six were acquitted in bench trials.

 ?? LAURIE SKRIVAN — ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH VIA AP ?? Former St. Louis city police officer Jason Stockley, 36, center, arrives with his legal team on Tuesday at the Carnahan Courthouse in St. Louis. Opening statements started Tuesday for Jason Stockley, who is charged with first-degree murder and armed...
LAURIE SKRIVAN — ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH VIA AP Former St. Louis city police officer Jason Stockley, 36, center, arrives with his legal team on Tuesday at the Carnahan Courthouse in St. Louis. Opening statements started Tuesday for Jason Stockley, who is charged with first-degree murder and armed...

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