The Borneo Post

‘No police will be charged in shooting of Jacob Blake’

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KENOSHA, United States: No police will be charged in the shooting of African American Jacob Blake, who was left paralysed in an incident which sparked unrest in the US city of Kenosha in August, the prosecutor announced Tuesday.

Kenosha County District Attorney Michael Graveley said that white police officer Rusten Sheskey had a reasonable claim of fear of being stabbed when he shot Blake several times in the back as Blake tried to get in his car.

Graveley said it was a “very narrow decision,” but that based on existing law for officerinv­olved shootings, it would be difficult for state prosecutor­s to prove that Sheskey was not engaged in self-defense if he or others were charged in the case.

“No Kenosha law enforcemen­t officer in this case will be charged with any criminal offence, based on the facts of the law,” said Graveley.

The shooting of the 29-year-old on Aug 23 in the Wisconsin town poured fuel onto nationwide anger over police shootings of Black Americans, sparking several days of violent protests.

Bystander video showed Sheskey firing several shots into Blake’s back as he tried to get into his car while his three children sat inside.

Blake survived but was left without the use of his legs. Graveley said that Blake, whom the officers were trying to arrest at the time, would also not be charged with a crime.

Blake’s family and attorney decried the decision not to charge the officers as another indication of racism built into the policing system.

“This is a slap in the face by Wisconsin government and the District attorney,” his uncle Justin Blake said in a press conference.

“What has happened has perpetuate­d systemic racism,” he said.

The family’s attorney, B’Ivory Lamarr, said there was “more than sufficient evidence” to charge Sheskey.

“It shows one very important thing, and that is that there are three justice systems in America: There’s one for Black and brown people, one for police officers and one for the rest of America.”

But Graveley said officers had reason to believe Blake was dangerous based on 911 calls to the scene from his estranged fiancee, an arrest warrant out for him on domestic abuse charges, and what he said to officers as he sought to leave the scene with his three children in the car.

The district attorney also said that officers made three attempts to taze Blake to subdue him, which all failed.

Graveley added it was “absolutely incontrove­rtible” that Blake had armed himself with a knife while being confronted by the police, and that Blake himself had admitted as much.

The shooting sparked three nights of violent protests which culminated on the night of Aug 25 when, drawn to the city by calls from right-wing militia, a 17year-old carrying an assault rifle, Kyle Rittenhous­e, shot dead two protestors and wounded a third.

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