Prosecutor asks for rare hearing into fatal shooting of Black teen by Delray Police
Sunday, March 20, 2005 at 09:30PM
TheSpook
Saying he wants to put public concern
to rest, State Attorney Barry Krischer on Thursday took the unusual
step of seeking a public hearing known as a coroner's inquest -- into
last month's shooting death of 16-year-old Jerrod Miller by a rookie
Delray Beach police officer. It is only the second time in Krischer's
12-year tenure that he has sought such a hearing. The first one was the
July 2003 coroner's inquest into the hanging death of Belle Glade
resident Feraris Golden.
After a two-day hearing, Circuit Judge Judge Harold Cohen ruled that a
depressed Golden took his own life. Krischer said Thursday that -- as
with the Golden case -- the community would be best served by a public
inquiry into Miller's death. "The benefit of an inquest is that it's
not secret. It's open to the public and everyone has an opportunity to
participate if they have germane information," he said. Officer Darren Cogoni shot Miller as the
teen drove a Cadillac through a courtyard at the Delray Full Service
Center during a Feb. 26 school dance. Miller reportedly fled when
Cogoni asked for the teen's license, according to witnesses. Records
indicate Miller did not have a license. [more] and [more]
Weekly protests planned over shooting of teen by Delray police [more]
Same old story in Delray Beach
Delray shooting spawns second task force
Shooting prompts NAACP task force Residents moved by the recent shooting
death of a 16-year-old at the hands of police emerged Friday night as
members of a new task force for the South Palm Beach County branch of
the NAACP. Seeking solutions to the racial tensions between the area's
black community and city officials, area residents packed into Pompey
Park's community center and established The Delray Beach Task Force.
The 27-member task force will work under the direction of the NAACP to
address a law enforcement investigation in the death of Jerrod Miller,
who was shot dead outside a school dance by a 23-year-old rookie Delray
Beach police officer. [more]
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