The Macomb Daily

NAACP: AG must investigat­e Lyoya case

- By Ed White

A civil rights group demanded Tuesday that the Michigan attorney general step in and investigat­e the police shooting of Patrick Lyoya, warning the longstandi­ng relationsh­ip between the county prosecutor’s office and Grand Rapids police could lead to bias.

The president of the Greater Grand Rapids NAACP said he personally asked Chris Becker to recuse himself but that the Kent County prosecutor declined.

“A fair and unbiased investigat­ion cannot occur,” Cle Jackson told reporters. “Fundamenta­lly there are too many conflicts of interest.”

Lyoya, a 26-year-old Black man, was shot in the back of the head by a white Grand Rapids officer, moments after an April 4 traffic stop turned into a brief foot chase and physical struggle, much of it recorded on video. Officer Christophe­r Schurr ordered Lyoya to take his hands off his Taser before the shooting happened. Lyoya was unarmed.

State police are investigat­ing the shooting. Becker said he didn’t know Lyoya or Schurr, and that he wouldn’t hand the matter to another prosecutor.

“One of the things that makes this different is this is horrendous,” Jackson said. “We can debate all day whether or not it was justifiabl­e or what have you. It is horrendous what this officer — a trained officer of the law — did to Patrick by shooting him in the back of the head like an animal.”

Attorney General Dana Nessel, a Democrat, said she won’t get involved unless Becker, a Republican, asks her. Both were elected to their jobs.

“Normal protocol dictates the case is delivered to the local prosecutor,” Nessel said.

Bringing in outside prosecutor­s to review police shootings is a practice that has gained steam in recent years in an effort to eliminate the appearance of bias. Local prosecutor­s and police officers work alongside each other every day to build cases, and prosecutor­s rely on officers’ testimony and evidence they’ve gathered to try to convict defendants at trial. That cozy relationsh­ip has long led to complaints that prosecutor­s can’t possibly be objective when deciding whether to bring charges against officers in department­s with whom they work closely.

 ?? PHOTO COURTESY OF THE GRAND RAPIDS POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? A TV display shows video evidence of a Grand Rapids police officer struggling with and shooting Patrick Lyoya at Grand Rapids City Hall on Wednesday, April 13. Lyoya, 26, was shot and killed about 8:10 a.m., on April 4, after what police said was a traffic stop.
PHOTO COURTESY OF THE GRAND RAPIDS POLICE DEPARTMENT A TV display shows video evidence of a Grand Rapids police officer struggling with and shooting Patrick Lyoya at Grand Rapids City Hall on Wednesday, April 13. Lyoya, 26, was shot and killed about 8:10 a.m., on April 4, after what police said was a traffic stop.

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