San Francisco Chronicle

Judge limits footage that family can see of shooting

- By Ben Finley Ben Finley is an Associated Press writer.

The family of a Black man who was fatally shot in his car by sheriff ’s deputies in Elizabeth City, N.C., will be shown only a fraction of body camera footage recorded at the scene and could wait days longer to view it, under a judge’s written ruling.

Attorneys for Andrew Brown Jr.’s family had expected to see the video this week after Judge Jeffery Foster ruled from the bench on April 27 that the family would be shown the videos “within 10 days.” The judge also said he would specify in a written order which portions they could view.

But it took the Superior Court judge until Thursday to issue the written opinion, which now says the 10day time period starts from the formal ruling. Pasquotank County Sheriff Tommy Wooten II said Friday that his office has agreed to the Brown family’s suggestion to show the video on Tuesday.

The ruling limits the family to viewing less than 20 minutes of the nearly two hours of video that was recorded before and after Brown was killed.

“The portions of the videos withheld are found to not contain images of the deceased, and thus are not appropriat­e for disclosure at this time,” Foster wrote.

Brown’s shooting on April 21 has drawn national attention to the small, majority Black city in the state’s rural northeaste­rn corner. And many city residents — as well as nationally prominent civil rights leaders and attorneys — are demanding full release of the footage over concerns that the shooting was unjustifie­d.

A prosecutor has said that Brown’s car ran into the deputies before they opened fire. The judge wrote that Brown “attempted to flee the scene and escape apprehensi­on” and that “at least one and as many as three officers fired their weapons into the vehicle operated by Brown.”

During the April 27 hearing on the matter, Foster said he would not publicly release the footage because it could jeopardize the ongoing investigat­ion into Brown’s death or threaten the safety of people seen in the footage.

Foster said the video must remain out of public view for at least 30 days, but he would consider releasing it after that point if investigat­ions are complete.

Family members have so far only been allowed to view a 20second clip from a single body camera. Family attorney Chantel CherryLass­iter told reporters last week that shots were heard from the instant the clip started with Brown’s car in his driveway and his hands on the steering wheel.

She said he did not try to back away until after deputies ran up to his car and began shooting, and he did not pose a threat to deputies.

Brown was shot five times, including in the back of the head, according to an independen­t autopsy commission­ed by his family.

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