Antelope Valley Press

5 years on, feds still silent on motorist’s deadly arrest

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FARMERVILL­E, La. (AP) — Mona Hardin has been waiting five long years for any resolution to the federal investigat­ion into her son’s deadly arrest by Louisiana State Police troopers, an anguish only compounded by the fact that nearly every other major civil rights case during that time has passed her by.

It took just months for Tyre Nichols’ beating death last year to result in federal charges against five Memphis police officers. A half-dozen white lawmen in Mississipp­i have been federally sentenced in last year’s torture of two Black suspects. And federal prosecutor­s long ago brought swift charges in the slayings of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia and Breonna Taylor in Kentucky.

Every one of those cases happened months or years after the death of Ronald Greene in northern Louisiana on May 10, 2019, which sparked national outrage after The Associated Press published long-suppressed body-camera video showing white troopers converging on the Black motorist before stunning, beating and dragging him as he wailed, “I’m scared!”

Yet half a decade after Greene’s violent death, the federal investigat­ion remains open and unresolved with no end in sight. And Hardin says she feels ghosted and forgotten by a Justice Department that no longer even returns her calls.

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“Where’s Ronald Greene’s justice?” asked Hardin, who refuses to bury her son’s cremated remains until she gets some measure of accountabi­lity. “I still have my boy in that urn, and that hurts me more than anything. We haven’t grieved the loss of Ronnie because we’ve been in battle.”

Justice Department spokespers­on Aryele Bradford said the investigat­ion remains ongoing and declined to provide further details.

Under federal law, no statute of limitation­s applies to potential civil rights charges in the case because Greene’s arrest was fatal. But prosecutor­s have wavered for years on whether to bring an indictment, having all but assured Greene’s family initially that an exhaustive FBI investigat­ion would produce charges of some kind.

A federal prosecutio­n seemed so imminent in 2022 that one state police supervisor told AP he expected to be indicted. The FBI had shifted its focus in those days from the troopers who left Greene handcuffed and facedown for more than nine minutes to state police brass suspected of obstructin­g justice by suppressin­g video evidence, quashing a detective’s recommenda­tion to arrest a trooper and pressuring a state prosecutor.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Demonstrat­ors hold a rally Friday for the late Ronald Greene outside the Union Parish Courthouse in Farmervill­e, La. Half a decade after Greene’s violent death, the federal investigat­ion remains open and unresolved with no end in sight. Two officers charged in Greene’s death are scheduled to be tried here later this year.
ASSOCIATED PRESS Demonstrat­ors hold a rally Friday for the late Ronald Greene outside the Union Parish Courthouse in Farmervill­e, La. Half a decade after Greene’s violent death, the federal investigat­ion remains open and unresolved with no end in sight. Two officers charged in Greene’s death are scheduled to be tried here later this year.

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