The Guardian (USA)

Judge denies requests to release body-cam video of Andrew Brown shooting

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A judge on Wednesday denied requests to release body-camera video in the case of a Black man who was shot to death by North Carolina deputies as they tried to arrest him on drug-related warrants.

Judge Jeffery Foster said he believed the videos contained informatio­n that could harm the investigat­ion or threaten the safety of people seen in the footage. He said the video must remain out of public view for at least 30 days.

“The release at this time would create a serious threat to the fair, impartial and orderly administra­tion of justice,” Foster said.

However, he said, videos from multiple body cameras and one dashboard camera must be shown to Andrew Brown Jr’s family within 10 days. He said some portions of the video may be blurred or redacted, including conversati­ons between officers. The family previously saw only a 20-second portion of one body-camera video.

The decision came shortly after a

North Carolina prosecutor said that Brown had hit law enforcemen­t officers with his car before they opened fire.

The district attorney, Andrew Womble, told the judge that he viewed the body-camera video and disagreed with a characteri­zation by attorneys for Brown’s family that his car was stationary when the shooting started. Womble said the video shows that Brown’s car made contact with law enforcemen­t twice before shots could be heard on the video.

Womble said that officers shouted commands and tried to open the car before any shots were fired.

The Pasquotank county sheriff, Tommy Wooten II, has previously indicated that none of the deputies were injured. At a news conference hours after the shooting, he said “They’re fine” when asked about the deputies.

The hearing came amid pressure on authoritie­s to release the video and calls for a special prosecutor to take the state’s case over from Womble. The judge said he planned to issue a decision on Wednesday after a short recess.

On Tuesday, Brown’s family released an independen­t autopsy showing he was shot five times, including in the back of the head.

The FBI’s Charlotte field office, which opened the civil rights investigat­ion into Brown’s death, said in a statement on Tuesday that its agents planned to work closely with the Department of Justice “to determine whether federal laws were violated”.

Brown was shot last Wednesday by deputies serving drug-related search and arrest warrants at his house in the

North Carolina town of Elizabeth City, about 160 miles north-east of Raleigh.

The autopsy results come a day after Brown’s relatives were shown the 20-second clip of footage.

One of the Brown family lawyers, Chantel Cherry-Lassiter, who viewed the video, said on Monday 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 the video showed Brown trying to drive away but posing no threat to officers after they ran up to his car and began shooting.

“He finally decides to try to get away and he backs out, not toward officers at all,” she told reporters on Monday.

The state bureau of investigat­ion began investigat­ing the shooting shortly after it happened. It initially said that it would turn its findings over to the local district attorney, as is standard under state laws and procedures.

But the governor, a Democrat, urged the appointmen­t of a special prosecutor to handle the state’s case.

“This would help assure the community and Mr Brown’s family that a decision on pursuing criminal charges is conducted without bias,” Cooper said in a statement. The state attorney general, Josh Stein, said state law puts control of criminal prosecutio­ns in the hands of the local district attorney, so his office cannot intervene unless asked. He said he has offered assistance to the local prosecutor, but has only received an acknowledg­ment.

 ??  ?? Protesters march in the streets over the killing of Andrew Brown Jr in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, on 27 April. Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Protesters march in the streets over the killing of Andrew Brown Jr in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, on 27 April. Photograph: Joe Raedle/Getty Images

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