The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Justice Department to probe police shooting

- By Claudia Lauer

DALLAS — The U.S. Justice Department has launched an investigat­ion into the fatal shooting of a black 15-yearold by a white police officer, a spokeswoma­n for the Dallas County District Attorney’s Office confirmed Thursday.

The investigat­ion prompted by the April 29 fatal shooting of Jordan Edwards by Balch Springs police Officer Roy Oliver is separate from the district attorney’s prosecutio­n of Oliver on a murder charge, said Brittany Dunn, a spokeswoma­n for District Attorney Faith Johnson. She said she did not know the scope and focus of the investigat­ion of the Balch Spring Police Department, and a message left for a Justice Department spokesman was not returned.

Oliver was fired and charged with murder in the April 29 shooting. He is free on bond.

Edwards’ family and its attorney said Johnson advised them of the federal investigat­ion during a meeting Thursday.

A Justice Department investigat­ion could end in a wide variety of outcomes — some civil, some criminal.

Civil rights activists are watching closely for clues to how the Trump administra­tion’s Justice Department intends to handle racially charged shootings by police. But conclusion­s are hard to draw because each case is so different and prosecutio­ns of officers are rare.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions has said he believes sweeping federal investigat­ions of police department­s can hurt officer morale and undermine crime fighting. But he has promised his Justice Department will prosecute individual officers who break the law.

In the case of Ferguson, Mo., the Department of Justice investigat­ed both whether the fatal shooting of Michael Brown merited civil rights charges against Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson and whether there were systematic issues of civil rights violations inside the city’s police department. Investigat­ors did not support charges against the officer, but found systematic constituti­onal violations by the department in stopping people without reasonable suspicion, using unreasonab­le force and other charges.

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