Black Teenager Killed by Minneapolis Police --- Mother calls for county attorney to act
Sunday, December 5, 2004 at 03:07AM
TheSpook
The mother of a 15-year-old boy fatally shot by a
Minneapolis police officer has challenged Hennepin County Attorney Amy
Klobuchar to decide whether to file charges against the officer rather
than leave that decision up to a grand jury. "Prosecute this man, and
make that decision yourself, and then be accountable to the people for
it," Tahisha Brewer wrote in the letter dated Nov. 23. Brewer's son,
Courtney Williams, was fatally shot by officer Scott Mars just after
midnight Oct. 24 as a foot chase ended in the 3000 block of Knox Av. N.
in the Jordan neighborhood. According to a search warrant affidavit in
the case, Mars repeatedly yelled for Williams to stop. He fired when
the boy stopped, turned and raised an arm, the affidavit said.
Statements attributed to Mars say Williams was holding a
"silver-colored handgun," although relatives and friends who were with
him the night of the shooting continue to dispute that, an aunt said
Thursday night. The investigation is continuing and has not yet been
scheduled to go before a grand jury. Letting a grand jury determine
whether charges should be filed against police officers involved in
fatal shootings is not required by law and is a completely
discretionary decision of prosecutors. Prosecutors can elect to bring
charges instead.Brewer alludes in her letter, and others have
said, that there is too much secrecy surrounding grand juries. "I want
this process out in the open, where everyone can observe it and make
sure that it is fair to my son," she wrote. "We want to make
sure that they are interviewing all the people they are supposed to,
because we know they haven't." said Ella Davis-Suggs,
Brewer's sister. Michelle Gross, vice president of
Communities United Against Police Brutality, said that grand juries
benefit police officers in cases such as Williams' death. "The jury's
decision is based on how good a case the prosecutors want to bring to
the jurors," she said. Because the presentations aren't open to public
scrutiny, she said, they are easily slanted. [more]