Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Case open, Louisiana official says

- MELINDA DESLATTE AND MICHAEL KUNZELMAN

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.

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