Well, only if he doesn't feel all the information is relevent.
If he doesn't give all the information then don't you think he will be accused of hiding information by the public? In the general area of Ferguson.
IMO it was a smart move. He did give the prosecution's case with the reasons for deciding which information (witnesses) was correct.
I'm sure he'd be accused of bias one way or the other regardless of what he did. That's not the issue. The issue is that he isn't supposed to show all the evidence, just the evidence that supports the prosecution case. He'd be in far less strife if he'd done his damn job, and the grand jury had still decided not to indict, which is always possible, albeit rare. He'd also be in less strife if the grand jury indicted, he went to trial, and there was a not guilty verdict. This way, he has essentially admitted that he tried to throw the case, which is unethical, and almost certainly illegal.
Wow, that was incredibly informative and I feel like I now know a lot more about what's going on. Thanks!!
In regards to what the prosecutor did - from what I've read he basically did what most prosecutors in grand juries do when a cop is the one accused - they treat him differently. So is the problem with this particular prosecutor, or with all prosecutors in the country?
My follow up question is this: If this had gone to trial, it doesn't seem to me that the cop would have been found guilty of anything. It seems like a clear case of a police officer doing his job to me.
So say that this grand jury thing turned out differently - and he was indicted. And it went to trial.. Do people expect him to have been found guilty there? It doesn't seem very likely to me, given what we know about the case! So is it possible that this prosecutor, in this case, did what he did because he knew that? And is it possible that this cop was thrown into a grand jury due to public pressure? Because it seems to me that most cases presented there are very solid cases that the prosecution expects to win.
You're welcome. As I said, luiz was correct, but since I had to educate myself on the process virtually from scratch - I did know a little bit from American television, but it's more the sort of stuff that you realise after the fact, than stuff I actually knew going in. When I was researching grand juries on Wiki and elsehwere this week, I had more than one moment of; "oh, so that's what that meant on that episode of
L&O" - I had a bit more of an insight on how to explain it completely from scratch to a fellow ignoramus.
It seems that this is relatively common amongst all prosecutors in the US, but it isn't universal. So the problem is with this particular prosecutor, and others like him, who violate their oath, rather than with the system nationwide. Or, to put it more accurately, the issue is with the system in practice, rather than the system in theory.
I think most people who are looking at this objectively - which is, admittedly, not many on either side; you and I, and luiz and a few others, may have the advantage of not being American or raised in its system, and therefore not having already picked a side in this issue in childhood - believe Wilson was innocent, that Brown attacked him, and that the officer acted in self-defence. So he would almost certainly have been found not guilty if it went to trial. Which is why it's even more surprising that the prosecutor would risk his job - and his life, given the violence - just to continue his unbroken streak of not bothering to pursue cops for possible crimes.
I think the prosecutor did this because he is corrupt and does not wish to charge police officers with crimes, ever. The evidence - he has a very, very good record of convictions, and a better one for indictments, but is somehow 0-5 for indicting police officers - indicates that the prosecutor throws all cases involving a possible police crime. This case is only different due to the national media coverage, which would have inspired a smarter man to do his job properly. He has cleverly confused people who don't understand the grand jury system into thinking he did his job, however, by claiming that he was "putting all the evidence on the table." That sounds like it's a stand-up act, unless you know that that is almost literally the opposite of what he is supposed to do before the grand jury.
And the media attention is absolutely the reason this went to the grand jury. The police were trying to not even bother to investigate, and there are apparently some problems with some of the evidence due to the police not investigating it immediately.
See, that's actually what I don't get. I don't get why American police use so much force in controlling crime. It seems way overboard, and a simple educational course as part of police training (control of civic aggression or something) would perhaps be the very solution to this violence.
Some evidence in Australia would seem to indicate that this is correct. Recently the Queensland state government halved the yearly training sessions for police in using firearms in self-defence - it was either from 4 to 2, or from 2 to 1, I don't recall - and the result has been more police shootings in QLD
this year than in the whole of Australia in an average year. There have been three fatal shootings this week, prompting even the notoriously corrupt QLD police to launch an investigation.
I suspect they will find in favour of all the officers involved - and it looks like the incidents were self-defence, though that relies on potentially uninformed or biased media coverage - but recommend reintroducing the old training regime, and a stronger emphasis on tasers. Part of the reason tasers have been sidelined is due to an incident last year where a drug-affected individual shrugged off several taser hits and stabbed an officer.
That is the price we pay for an orderly society. If you prefer the alternative, feel free to relocate to Somalia.
Hang on, innocent deaths at the hands of thugs in uniform are the price we pay for orderly society? That is almost the exact excuse Goering used to disregard civilian deaths during the Night of the Long Knives.
That is not quite what I am saying. If you are innocent or the cops are overstepping in some way, it is not wise, nor should it be encouraged, for a person to resist arrest or assault an officer. Accept what is happening and pursue your legal and respectable avenues of redressing the matter. There a myriad of rights groups waiting to take up your cause, whatever the case may be. It doesn't even had to be credible in any way.
Or you can resist with force and face a beating or death. The choice is yours, but particularly if the abuse of power is that of force to begin with, what makes you think that resisting won't simply escalate and that a beating won't turn into a shooting? I understand that it is hard to think these things through in the moment, but it is incumbent upon those who are likely to suffer the consequences to protect themselves from possible harm. If you are waiting for the system to be perfectly fair and reasonable...you can wish in one hand and crap in the other. See which one fills up first.
This sounds all fair and good; until, despite you obeying all instructions, a cop starts stomping on the back of your head, or they pull a gun on you and start yelling, or they drop their knee into the back of your neck while you're handcuffed on the ground. These are all things I have seen on
Cops, by the way, which means they are apparently considered acceptable behaviour from American police officers, or they wouldn't do it with television cameras to hand.
Most people, when treated this way, will
instinctively resist, if only because your body tends to turn and lift slightly if someone puts a knee in certain positions. You can take my word on that, I have jiujitsu and judo training, and there are some positions a person can put their foot or knee that cause your body to reflexively jerk in certain ways. According to what you have stated, this 'resistance' gives the police an excuse to beat on you, and if you attempt to defend yourself - and most people who feel like they are being beaten to death will defend themselves - then the cop has the right to shoot you dead.
That, gentleman, is a police state, and it is something your entire American Constitution, legal system, and way of life was set up by your Founding Fathers to avoid.
Just giving up and accepting oppression is not American. Let alone is being the tyrant.
Exactly. Even moreso than most societies, American society was founded on the predication that freedo trumps security, and that the rights of the individual are more important than the rights of the state. To abandon those principles is to abandon the very fabric of American society.
I'm white and I'd beat six months by a country mile.
Just sayin'.
Dude, we get it, you're so edgy. You're not the only person in the thread who has had unfortunate run-ins with the police, and your personal issues with them have nothing to do with the underlying issue. So stop bringing them up.
Didn't even bother watching it.
I wonder if you'll bother reading
this?