Albuquerque Journal

Anxiety mounts

As Ferguson awaits the grand jury decision, pastors preach calm, others question delay

- BY DAVID A. LIEB AND ANDALE GROSS A boarded-up storefront displays “I Love Ferguson” parapherna­lia Sunday. A grand jury is deciding whether to bring criminal charges. Cardboard cutouts of Sister Eufrasia Eluvathing­al, top left, and the Rev. Elias Chavara

FERGUSON, Mo. — Despite preparatio­ns for a weekend decision in the Ferguson shooting case, the grand jurors apparently need more time to deliberate, and the uncertaint­y just seemed to feed the anxiety and speculatio­n Sunday in a city already on edge.

More than 3½months have passed since police officer Darren Wilson, who is white, killed unarmed black 18-year-old Michael Brown after a confrontat­ion in the middle of a street in the St. Louis suburb. The shooting triggered riots and looting, and police responded with armored vehicles and tear gas.

Many in the area thought a grand jury decision on whether to charge Wilson with a crime would be announced Sunday, based partly on a stepped-up police presence in the preceding days, including the setting up of barricades around the building where the panel was meeting.

The grand jurors met Friday but apparently didn’t reach a decision, and they were widely expected to reconvene today, though there was no official confirmati­on of that.

During church services Sunday, some pastors encouraged their flocks not to fret.

“Everybody stand to your feet and tell somebody, ‘Don’t be afraid. God is still in control,’ ” said pastor, Bishop L.O. Jones, as church members repeated after him.

The Rev. Freddy Clark of Shalom Church in nearby Florissant told the mostly black inter-- denominati­onal congregati­on that “justice will be served” whichever way the decision goes, because God will take care of it.

“None of us are pleased about what happened,” said parishione­r James Tatum. “Whatever the verdict is, we have to understand that’s the verdict.”

As they wait, some people have continued daily protests, while speculatio­n has grown that the delays are intentiona­l.

“People feel like it’s been engineered, so that the results wouldn’t come out until after the election and until the weather got cold, and it would be more difficult to protest,” said Susan McGraugh, supervisor of the Criminal Defense Clinic at the Saint Louis University School of Law. “It’s really adding fuel to the fire.”

Wilson has remained out of public view since the shooting, though CNN reported Sunday that he has met with network anchors to discuss possible interviews. Don Lemon and Anderson Cooper, both of CNN, each said they had met with Wilson.

St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch had said he expected a grand jury decision by mid-to-late November. But that’s not in his control.

The 12-person grand jury deliberate­s in secret, without McCulloch, and sets its own schedule depending upon when the members are available.

It’s not uncommon for deliberati­ons to take awhile in complex cases when, such as in the Brown shooting, self-defense is alleged or there are two widely conflictin­g versions of events, said Cole County Prosecutor Mark Richardson, who is not involved in the Ferguson case.

If jurors do meet today, there is no guarantee they will reach a decision that day, or even this week.

“In the course of their deliberati­ons, if one grand juror convinces the others that ‘Look, we need to hear from an additional witness,’ and they all agree, the prosecutor’s got a duty to bring that witness in,” Richardson said.

When the panel reaches a decision, it will be up to McCulloch to publicize it.

Sunday would have been an opportune time to minimize disruption­s from protests, since schools and government­s are planning on only a partial work week because of Thanksgivi­ng, said Peter Joy, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis. He said today or Tuesday would still make sense.

But “my belief is that with the holiday, releasing it on Wednesday, Thursday or Friday would produce a negative reaction,” Joy said.

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 ?? DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
DAVID GOLDMAN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

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