Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette
Case open, Louisiana official says
BATON ROUGE — After federal authorities announced that they would not prosecute two white police officers in the shooting death of a black man, the man’s family, lawyers and supporters called upon Louisiana’s attorney general to seek justice.
The U.S. Department of Justice said it found insufficient evidence to charge either officer, Blane Salamoni or Howie Lake II, in the death of Alton Sterling, 37, last summer outside a Baton Rouge convenience store. The decision leaves state Attorney General Jeff Landry, a Republican, to decide whether to pursue a case.
Landry said Wednesday that he has directed the Justice Department to forward its investigative materials to the Louisiana State Police. He called state police “the agency with the most expertise in officer-involved shootings” and said he assigned a prosecutor from his office to assist.
“As of now, we consider this matter an open investigation by [state police],” Landry said in a statement.
However, Gov. John Bel Edwards, a Democrat who oversees the state police, said the investigation is in Landry’s hands. And police Col. Kevin Reeves sent a letter to Landry saying the state police will help Landry’s office if the attorney general decides further evidence collection is necessary.
“There has already been a very thorough investigation where the type of work that the state police would do, had it been the principal agency investigating this matter from the outset, has already been done,” the governor said.
The federal investigators found that Salamoni pointed a gun at Sterling’s head and later shot him three times after saying that Sterling was reaching for a gun in his pocket. Salamoni fired three more shots into Sterling’s back when he began to sit up and move, and the officers recovered a loaded revolver from Sterling’s pocket, the investigation found.
Landry has frequently clashed with Edwards on financial and legal issues and has pushed legislation aimed at punishing cities like New Orleans deemed to be “sanctuaries” for people in the country illegally.
In the immediate aftermath of Sterling’s shooting in July, the local district attorney recused himself from the investigation because of long-standing work relationships he has with Salamoni’s parents. One is a Baton Rouge police captain; the other is a retired police supervisor.
That left the investigation and any decision to pursue state charges up to Landry, a tea party-aligned Republican and former sheriff’s deputy who has been Louisiana’s attorney general since January 2016 after burnishing his conservative credentials as a oneterm congressman.
During his tenure in Congress, he drew attention for his strong opposition to President Barack Obama. He refused to attend a congressional meeting with the president on the debt crisis and was perhaps best known for holding a “Drilling = jobs” sign objecting to Obama’s handling of domestic oil drilling during a 2011 Obama speech to Congress.
A lawyer for two of the Sterling children praised Landry as he called on him to pursue a case against the officers.