inkedone -> RE: The Grand Jury has decided in Ferguson (12/8/2014 7:21:29 PM)
|
quote:
Grand Jury System is still rigged to protect the Police. • Most states give officers wide discretion to use whatever force they reasonably believe is necessary to make an arrest or to protect themselves, a standard that hinges on the officer's perceptions of danger during the encounter, legal scholars and criminologists say. • "The whole process is really reluctant to criminalize police behavior," said Eugene O'Donnell, a former prosecutor who teaches at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan. "The grand jurors are, the jurors are, the judges are, the appellate courts are." • Rarely do deaths lead to murder or manslaughter charges. Research by Philip M. Stinson, a criminologist at Bowling Green State University, reports that 41 officers were charged with either murder or manslaughter in shootings while on duty over a seven-year period ending in 2011. Over that same period, police departments reported 2,600 justifiable homicides to the F.B.I. (Charges are only brought in 1.5% of all reported cases.) • Geoffrey P. Alpert, a criminologist at the University of South Carolina who studies the use of force, said police officers are rarely indicted when they express remorse to jurors, admit they made a mistake, and stress that they were following their training, as Officer Pantaleo had. In shooting cases, officers often testify that they perceived a deadly threat and acted in self-defense. This stance can inoculate them even if the threat later turns out to be false. Here's an exception in the case of murdered black man: >>Officer Kerrick was the first Charlotte-Mecklenburg police officer charged in a fatal shooting in more than 30 years. He was one of several officers who responded to a 911 call, placed by a woman who was alarmed by a stranger knocking at her door at 2:30 a.m. Moments earlier, Mr. Ferrell, a former safety for Florida A&M University, had gotten into a car accident, and his vehicle had crashed into the trees. He had walked a half-mile or so to seek help. Instead, Mr. Ferrell, who was black, was mistaken for a burglar. Officers arrived 11 minutes after the call and approached Mr. Ferrell. Police officials said Mr. Ferrell ran toward the officers, who fired a Taser but missed. When he continued to press forward, Officer Kerrick fired 12 bullets, 10 of which struck Mr. Ferrell. Charles G. Monnett III, a lawyer for Mr. Ferrell's parents, said the indictment would not have come had the state prosecutor not taken the case over from the Mecklenburg County district attorney. "The district attorney's office works way too closely with the local police department and individual officers to be able to objectively look at these cases," he said.<< http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/08/nyregion/grand-juries-seldom-charge-police-officers-in-fatal-actions.html?ref=us&_r=0 With such statistics something to ponder about the selection process of a Grand Jury; is the jury pool too limited across the country and or in Ferguson? Is the jury selection process mainly just technical in a sense to favor a Pick-A-Pal selection due to the limited pool?
|
|
|
|