According to Officer Wilson's testimony, he did not fire at all while Brown was running away or when Brown was turning. Wilson didn't recommence firing until after Brown began to "bullrush" him. Thus, based upon Wilson's account, the 185 feet pursuit of Brown has no relevance to this analysis.
Simply incorrect. Of course what happened just prior to the shooting has relevance. For example, it shows that Brown had been physically pushing himself pretty hard already, got into a fight with a cop, and lost his flip flops running. This means he most assuredly wasn't going to cover that distance in the amount of time you thought he might.
My focus is on whether Office Wilson could have fired 10 shots [with a three second pause] in the time Brown began to "bullrush" Wilson from a distance of 30 feet until Brown dropped dead at a distance of 8 feet. Yes, I could only guess at how far Wilson back pedaled. My best guess was 8 feet [so that Wilson could remain steady enough to fire 10 times and hit Brown 6 times].
Guessing isn't good enough. Guessing leads to error. In fact, in looking at the shell casing dispersal, it would appear Wilson backed up a lot further than 8 feet while firing.
You did take the time to look at the diagram I linked, right?
The linked-to drawing actually strengthens my conclusion.
Um..no..it doesn't. It actually refutes it.
According to it, the distance from the furthest red stain, i.e. blood, to the body is only 21' 7".
You do realize there was also blood stains on the patrol car. Brown was initially shot during the struggle in the car.
Assuming that Brown could run at the same speed as I, this means Brown could cover this distance in TWO seconds.
First of all, you have no idea how fast Brown was able to run or not. Again, he'd already been shot, struggled for a gun, run a couple hundred feet losing his sandals, and then turned and ran at Wilson again.
There are way too many variables there for you to really say with any accuracy how fast he was able to run or not.
Yet during those two second, Wilson would have had to fire a fusillade of shots, paused for three second, and then fired a second fusillade of shots.
Pure hyperbole.
I can think of only two explanations for this:
(1) Wilson unlawfully fired shots at Brown as the fled, stopped firing for the three seconds which Brown took to stop, turn around and decide to charge Wilson, and then recommenced firing once Brown charged. or...
Too many of the shots from the initial 'fusillade' as you say hit Brown for this to be supported logically, and the forensics showed that all the shots hit him from the front, not running away.
(2) Wilson did not fire at Brown as he was running. But neither did Brown "bullrush" Wilson, but came forward slowly, and thus would not be perceived by a reasonable officer as posing a risk. Nevertheless, Wilson opened fire upon him.
Or maybe he was still running just not as fast as you assume considering he'd lost his sandals, fought a cop, and ran a couple hundred feet already when already shot back at the patrol car (all of which you seem to want to ignore as factors).
Not so. Officer Wilson had thirteen rounds in his weapon that day. He fired two inside the car and got back to the station with one round left. This must mean that he fired ten rounds while outside the car. This would mean the audio should sound like either: pow-pow-pause-pow-pow-pause-pow-pow-pause-pow-pow-pause-pow-pow or pow-pow-pow-pause-pow-pow-pow-pause-pow-pow-pow-pause-pow. The audio indicates only one pause.
The audio indicated that it was a 4 to 6 round initial burst followed by another 4 round burst. There was only 1 pause recorded. There was also 1 unfired round found on the pavement at the scene.