Is the behavior of the department before the fact relevant to the shooting? Because that is what much of the DOJ report covers.
Of course it is, and the Ferguson PD has suffered the consequences, have they not?
Is the behavior of the department before the fact relevant to the shooting? Because that is what much of the DOJ report covers.
Of course it is, and the Ferguson PD has suffered the consequences, have they not?
Not yet. A few have been fired and a few resigned, but that's about it.
Personally, I'm still surprised that people refer to someone who witnessed no part of the event as a "witness"\, or that putting a person one knows to be lying front-to-back of the stand as anything but a gross violation of ethics that in any other profession, would lead to certain prison time and permanent banishment from the field.
What appropriate consequences do you think they should face?
He was exonerated by the DOJ. Every credible witness confirmed Darren's version of events, or at least the part where Wilson claimed that Brown did not surrender.
Fascinating, but also sad.I find it hard to believe anyone is till ignoring the other DOJ report or the role the FPD and County police played in the aftermath of the shooting, but here we are.
Isn't the world a fascinating place?
What is it about biased/slanted/unfair GJ procedure that you don't understand?![]()
The DOJ said they couldn't prove a federal civil rights case. Then they turned around and found the whole department guilty of racism. Wilson was hired after being fired from a department that was so racist it had to be dissolved and rebuilt.
Brown was shot in THE TOP OF HIS HEAD. I'd agree with a negligent homicide charge, but the 'Brown was charging at Wilson' is NOT CREDIBLE.
To think Wilson didn't get off due to favoritism is BS. He got to change his story, had a prosecutor that went out of his way to find him not culpable. That's not confirmation bias, those are established facts.
Fascinating, but also sad.
It's also fascinating that members of this forum who claim to be skeptics think the conclusions of a tainted GJ is so certain.
And how they can determine the struggle with the gun was Brown trying to shoot Wilson as opposed to trying to stop Wilson pointing the gun at Brown.
And how they can ludicrously conclude Brown was charging at Wilson with his head down as opposed to 5 eyewitnesses that said he was falling to or trying to get down on the ground while Wilson kept shooting.
It's sad really.
Despite the farcical attempt by Bob McCulloch, I accept the results of the DOJ investigation as valid.It's also fascinating that members of this forum who claim to be skeptics think the conclusions of a tainted GJ is so certain.
Fascinating, but also sad.
It's also fascinating that members of this forum who claim to be skeptics think the conclusions of a tainted GJ is so certain.
And how they can determine the struggle with the gun was Brown trying to shoot Wilson as opposed to trying to stop Wilson pointing the gun at Brown.
And how they can ludicrously conclude Brown was charging at Wilson with his head down as opposed to 5 eyewitnesses that said he was falling to or trying to get down on the ground while Wilson kept shooting.
It's sad really.
What is it about biased/slanted/unfair GJ procedure that you don't understand?![]()
Do you have anything besides rhetoric and hyperbole that indicates the GJ was biased, slanted, and unfair?
Yeah, McCulloch bragged about presenting all the evidence to the Grand Jury, even the stuff he knew was false. That's not how Grand Jurys work. The prosecutor is supposed to make a case that the person should go to trial. McCulloch didn't even attempt to make the case. Knowingly putting false testimony in front of a jury is a whole other level of ethical problems. Plus, there was some issues of his aides citing a law that had been rendered unconstitutional a few decades earlier.
McCulloch basically threw the case. He's very lucky the DOJ came to the same conclusion to not prosecute. As it is, he's still facing an ethics complaint.
IANAL, but I believe that's what the defense council is supposed to do during trial.I find it strange, though, that on the opposite end of the spectrum, it would be perfectly acceptable to ignore and not present any exculpatory evidence.
Then he shouldn't have taken it to the Grand Jury. Since he did, it was his job to make a case. That's his role in the process.McCulloch didn't even attempt to make the case, because there wasn't one to be made.
No, it made it to the Grand Jury because McCulloch decided to take it to the Grand Jury. His other options were to take it to trial or to simply not prosecute at all.It seems to have only made it to the GJ because of media attention - otherwise it would have been dropped for lack of evidence.
Well, really, why can't it be both?The problem isn't McCulloch, it's the archaic GJ system.
IANAL, but I believe that's what the defense council is supposed to do during trial.
(opposite end of what spectrum?)
Then he shouldn't have taken it to the Grand Jury. Since he did, it was his job to make a case. That's his role in the process.
No, it made it to the Grand Jury because McCulloch decided to take it to the Grand Jury. His other options were to take it to trial or to simply not prosecute at all.
IMHO, McCulloch didn't want to prosecute, but didn't want the political heat for making that decision. So, he took it to the Grand Jury with every intent of not convincing them to indict. That way he claim that he tried, but that it just wasn't meant to be.
Well, really, why can't it be both?
Yeah, McCulloch bragged about presenting all the evidence to the Grand Jury, even the stuff he knew was false. That's not how Grand Jurys work. The prosecutor is supposed to make a case that the person should go to trial. McCulloch didn't even attempt to make the case. Knowingly putting false testimony in front of a jury is a whole other level of ethical problems. Plus, there was some issues of his aides citing a law that had been rendered unconstitutional a few decades earlier.
McCulloch basically threw the case. He's very lucky the DOJ came to the same conclusion to not prosecute. As it is, he's still facing an ethics complaint.