Author Topic: Grand jury will not file charges against police in shooting death of 12-year-old Tamir Rice  (Read 232 times)

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Offline flowers

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http://www.foxnews.com/us/2015/12/28/grand-jury-will-not-file-charges-against-police-in-shooting-death-12-year-old-tamir-rice.html?intcmp=hpbt3

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A white police officer who fatally shot a black 12-year-old carrying a pellet gun in November 2014 will not be indicted, an Ohio prosecutor announced Monday.

Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy J. McGinty said a grand jury declined to charge a Cleveland police officer or his partner in the death of Tamir Rice. The grand jury had been meeting since mid-October.

Surveillance video of the shooting showed patrolman Timothy Loehmann, a rookie at the time, shooting Rice as the cruiser driven by patrolman Frank Garmback skidded to a stop on Nov. 22, 2014. Rice died the next day during surgery.

McGinty called the episode "a perfect storm of human error" but said no crime was committed.

Rice was carrying a plastic airsoft gun when he was shot and McGinty said it was "indisputable" that Rice drew his weapon as the officer who shot him approached.

The grand jury decision comes more than a year after Rice's death, and his family has repeatedly questioned why the case has dragged on.

Subodh Chandra, a Cleveland attorney who represents the Rice family in a federal civil rights lawsuit over the shooting, said he had braced himself for the news that the officers, both white, wouldn't be indicted.

"This is apparently how long it takes to engineer denying justice to a family when the video of the incident clearly illustrates probable cause to charge the officer," Chandra said.

Unlike criminal trials, in which prosecutors must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt for a conviction, the burden of proof for an indictment is much lower. The grand jury would have had to decide only that a crime might have been committed to indict the officers.

Grand jury proceedings are supposed to be secret, but McGinty has released expert reports and investigative documents to the media and public while citing his desire for transparency in how the case is being handled.


Offline flowers

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